Ralph Allan Bradley (November 28, 1923 – October 30, 2001) was a Canadian-American statistician and statistics educator, whose research lie in the fields of design of experiments, nonparametric statistics, sequential analysis, and multivariate analysis. He is known for the Bradley–Terry model in pairwise comparison[1] and foundation of the Department of Statistics at Florida State University.[2][3]
Education and career
editBradley was born in Smith Falls, Ontario, Canada and grew up in Wellington, Ontario. He studied mathematics and physics at Queen's University, receiving an honors degree in 1944. After a stint at the Canadian Army, he returned to Queen's University and obtained an MA in 1946. He received his PhD in theoretical statistics in 1949 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill under the supervision of Harold Hotelling.
Bradley was employed at McGill University from 1949 to 1950 and as a faculty member at Virginia Tech from 1950 to 1958. In 1959, he moved to Florida State University to found the Department of Statistics there and stayed on until 1978 as the head of the department. In 1982, he moved to the University of Georgia as Research Professor of Statistics. Bradley retired from the University of Georgia in 1992. He continued to participate in research activities afterwards and was named professor emeriti at both Florida State University and University of Georgia.[2][4]
Honors and awards
editBradley was editor of the journal Biometrics from 1957 to 1962. He was Vice-President from 1975 to 1978 and President in 1981 of the American Statistical Association. Bradley was a Fellow of the American Statistical Association and a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.[3] The statistics department of the University of Georgia organizes an annual lecture in his name.[5]
References
edit- ^ Bradley, Ralph A. (1984), "14 Paired comparisons: Some basic procedures and examples", Handbook of Statistics, Nonparametric Methods, vol. 4, Elsevier, pp. 299–326, doi:10.1016/s0169-7161(84)04016-5, retrieved 2023-08-19
- ^ a b Hollander, Myles; Bradley, Ralph A. (2001). "A Conversation with Ralph A. Bradley". Statistical Science. 16 (1): 75–100. ISSN 0883-4237.
- ^ a b Hollander, Myles. "Ralph Allan Bradley 1923-2001" (PDF).
- ^ "Ralph Allen Bradley". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2023-08-19.
- ^ "The 2023 Bradley Lecture". National Institute of Statistical Sciences. 2023-02-24. Retrieved 2023-08-19.