Robert V. Hogg

Robert V. Hogg
Born 8 November 1924
Hannibal, Missouri
Died 23 December 2014(2014-12-23) (aged 90)
Highlands Ranch, Colorado
Residence Highlands Ranch, Colorado
Citizenship United States of America
Nationality American
Fields Statistics
Institutions University of Iowa
Alma mater University of Iowa (Ph.D.)
University of Illinois
Doctoral advisor Allen Thornton Craig
Known for

eponymous textbooks ("Hogg & Craig" and "Hogg and Tanis")
Statistics education
Robust and nonparametric statistics

Early version of Basu's theorem
Notable awards

Gottfried Noether Award 2001 (nonparametrics)
President of American Statistical Association 1988
Founder's Award of the American Statistical Association 1991
Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics

Carver Medal of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute
Distinguished Teaching Award of the Mathematical Association of America
Children four, including Rob Hogg[1]

Robert Vincent ("Bob") Hogg (8 November 1924 – 23 December 2014)[2] was an American statistician and professor of statistics of the University of Iowa. Hogg is known for his widely used textbooks on statistics (with his 1963 Ph.D. student Elliot Alan Tanis) and on mathematical statistics (with his 1950 Ph.D. advisor Allen Thornton Craig). Hogg has received recognition for his research on robust and adaptive nonparametric statistics and for his scholarship on total quality management and statistics education.[3]

Academic career

Early life

Born on 8 November 1924 in Hannibal, Missouri, Hogg served three years in the US Navy from 1943 through 1946. In 1947, he graduated from the University of Illinois with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. With the goal of becoming an actuary, Hogg matriculated at the mathematics department of the University of Iowa (then the "State University of Iowa").[4] However, Hogg studied statistics under Allen Craig, who became his mentor and helped him obtain a job teaching statistics at the Mathematics Department. Hogg earned his Ph.D. 1950 under Allen Craig. After graduating, Hogg remained at the Mathematics Department, where he remained to become a long-serving professor.[4]

Basu's theorem: Special cases

Hogg independently discovered a special case of "Basu's theorem", a few years before the publication by Deb Basu.[5][6][7] Hogg's second paper on the topic of Basu's theorem was never published, because of a negative report by an anonymous referee in 1953.[8] Later, Basu refers "to Hogg and Craig (1956) for several interesting uses [of Basu's theorem] in proving results in distribution theory".[9]

Collaboration and friendship with Allen Craig

The textbook "Hogg and Craig" was innovative, particularly in emphasizing sufficient statistics: Sufficient statistics were treated not only for parametric families but also for nonparametric probability distributions: In particular, the sufficiency and completeness of the order statistics from a continuous distribution were treated. Another innovation was the systematic derivation of the distributions of functions of several random variables by using the change-of-variable method.[10]

As noted before, Craig was Hogg's mentor, helping him to obtain a teaching position while a graduate student and also supervising his thesis. Later, after Hogg had graduated, Craig became a close friend, and served as the best man at Hogg's wedding and later as the "godparent" to each of Hogg's four children. Indeed, Hogg's son Allen was named after Craig.[11]

Chairing a new Department of Statistics

In 1965 Hogg became the founding chair of the new Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, and he remained as the chair for nineteen years. At Iowa, Hogg held other positions, including Chair of the Quality Management and Productivity Program and the Hanson Chair of Manufacturing Productivity. After serving 51 years as an instructor at the University of Iowa, Hogg became Professor Emeritus in 2001.[3]

Statistics education

Hogg has been a leader in statistics education in the US.[12]

Hogg has received a number of educational awards by state and national organizations: these awards include the Iowa Governor’s Science Medal for Teaching in 1990, the Iowa Board of Regents' Award for Faculty Excellence in 1992, and the Iowa Section of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA)'s Distinguished Teaching Award in 1992 with the national MAA's Distinguished Teaching Award in 1993.[13] At the University of Iowa, Hogg won his first teaching award after a student submitted a nomination with the title "There is a hog in my statistics book!".[14]

Honors

Hogg's 70th birthday was marked by a conference organized by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, whose proceedings were published as a special issue of Communications in Statistics — Theory and Methods in 1996; in the conference proceedings, a list of Hogg's publications appears on pages 2467–2481.[15][16][17]

For his research in nonparametric statistics, Hogg received the Gottfried Noether Senior Scholar Award in 2001.

Hogg has been recognized internationally as a leading researcher in statistics and as an exemplary professor of statistics who has served as a public spokesperson for the profession. Hogg has had a particularly visible role in the United States, where he was elected as President of the American Statistical Association (ASA), serving in 1988. One of the ASA President's tasks is to arrange an annual meeting, and Hogg's diligence was rewarded by the ASA staff, who presented him with the name tag, "Boss Hogg" (after the name of a character in the television series The Dukes of Hazzard).[18] Three years after Hogg had served as President, he was awarded the ASA’s Founder’s Award in 1991.[19]

Hogg has also been internationally active on behalf of the statistics profession. Hogg is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, which awarded him its Carver Medal.[20] Hogg is also an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute.[3]

References

  1. http://www.robhogg.org/about
  2. Colleagues, family remember a statistical giant
  3. 1 2 3 Randles, Ronald Herman (2007). "A Conversation with Robert V. Hogg". Statistical Science. 22 (1): 137–152. doi:10.1214/088342306000000637.
  4. 1 2 Pages 137–139 in Randles.
  5. Basu's theorem appears in Basu, D. (1955). "On Statistics Independent of a Complete Sufficient Statistic". Sankhyā. 15 (4): 377–380. JSTOR 25048259. MR 74745. Zbl 0068.13401.
  6. Boos, Dennis D.; Oliver, Jacqueline M. Hughes (Aug 1998). "Applications of Basu's Theorem". The American Statistician. Boston: American Statistical Association. 52 (3): 218–221. doi:10.2307/2685927. JSTOR 2685927. MR 1650407.
  7. For Hogg's independent and early (1953) discovery of special cases of Basu's theorem, see page 511 in Ghosh, Malay (October 2002). "Basu's Theorem with Applications: A Personalistic Review". Sankhyā: the Indian Journal of Statistics, Series A. 64 (3): 509–531. JSTOR 25051412. MR 1985397.
  8. Randles and Calvin, page 2476. (Later, in his interview with Randles, Hogg speculates that the anonymous referee was Erich Leo Lehmann.)
  9. Page 348 in Statistical Information and Likelihood : A Collection of Critical Essays by Dr. D. Basu ; J. K. Ghosh, editor. Springer 1988.
  10. Page 2468 in Randles and Calvin. (Pages 139–140 in Randles.)
  11. Page 141 in Randles, which mentions only two children. Page 149 mentions four children.
  12. Randles and Calvin, page 2468. Randles declares that Hogg is a leader in statistics education on page 144 of Randles.
  13. Randles and Calvin report that the MAA award was in 1992 (Page 2468). (Randles reports the MAA prize in 1993 on page 146.)
  14. Hogg quoted on page 146 in Randles.
  15. James A. Calvin, ed. (1996). "Preface the institute of mathematical statistics central regional meeting". Communications in Statistics — Theory and Methods. 25 (11): i–viii+2459–2873. doi:10.1080/03610929608831849. MR 1424730.
  16. Randles, Ronald H.; Calvin, James A. (1996). "The professional contributions of Robert V. Hogg". Communications in Statistics — Theory and Methods. 25 (11): 2467–2481. doi:10.1080/03610929608831850. MR 1424730.
  17. Calvin, James A.; Calvin, James A. (1996). "Preface". Communications in Statistics — Theory and Methods. 25 (11): 2459–2465. doi:10.1080/03610929608831849. MR 1424730.
  18. Page 147 in Randles.
  19. Page 146 in Randles.
  20. Page 151 in Randles.

Textbooks

Articles

Statistics education and the statistics profession

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