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John W. Tukey

John Tukey
John Tukey.jpg
John Wilder Tukey
Born (1915-06-16)June 16, 1915
New Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died July 26, 2000(2000-07-26) (aged 85)
New Brunswick, New Jersey, U.S.
Residence United States
Nationality American
Fields Mathematician
Institutions Bell Labs
Princeton University
Alma mater Brown University
Princeton University
Doctoral advisor Solomon Lefschetz
Doctoral students Arthur Dempster
Leo Goodman
Paul Meier
Frederick Mosteller
Kai Lai Chung
Known for Exploratory data analysis
Projection pursuit
Box plot
Cooley–Tukey FFT algorithm
Tukey's range test
Tukey lambda distribution
Tukey–Duckworth test
Siegel–Tukey test
Tukey's trimean
Tukey's test of additivity
Tukey's lemma
Blackman-Tukey transformation
Tukey mean difference plot
Tukey median and Tukey depth
Coining the term 'bit'
Notable awards Samuel S. Wilks Award (1965)
National Medal of Science (USA) in Mathematical, Statistical, and Computational Sciences (1973)
Shewhart Medal (1976)
IEEE Medal of Honor (1982)
Deming Medal (1982)
James Madison Medal (1984)
Foreign Member of the Royal Society (1991)

John Wilder Tukey ForMemRS (/ˈtki/; June 16, 1915 – July 26, 2000) was an American mathematician best known for development of the FFT algorithm and box plot. The Tukey range test, the Tukey lambda distribution, the Tukey test of additivity, and the Teichmüller–Tukey lemma all bear his name.

Tukey was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1915, and obtained a B.A. in 1936 and M.Sc. in 1937, in chemistry, from Brown University, before moving to Princeton University where he received a Ph.D. in mathematics.

During World War II, Tukey worked at the Fire Control Research Office and collaborated with Samuel Wilks and William Cochran. After the war, he returned to Princeton, dividing his time between the university and AT&T Bell Laboratories. He became a full professor at 35 and founding chairman of the Princeton statistics department in 1965.

Among many contributions to civil society, Tukey served on a committee of the American Statistical Association that produced a report challenging the conclusions of the Kinsey Report, Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.


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