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tmule | 5 months ago

“ The author Andrew Gelman created a whole new branch of Bayesian statistics ...” Love Gelman, but this is playing fast and loose with facts.

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kragen|5 months ago

His book on hierarchical modeling with Hill has 20398 cites on Google Scholar https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cluster=94492350364273118... and Wikipedia calls him "a major contributor to statistical philosophy and methods especially in Bayesian statistics[6] and hierarchical models.[7]", which sounds like the claim is more true than false.

nextos|5 months ago

He co-wrote the reference textbook on the topic and made interesting methodological contributions, but Gelman acknowledges other people as creators of the theoretical underpinnings of multilevel/hierarchical modeling, including Stein or Donoho [1]. The field is quite old, one can find hierarchical models in articles that were published many decades ago.

Also, IMHO, his best work has been done describing how to do statistics. He has written somewhere I cannot find now that he sees himself as a user of mathematics, not as a creator of new theories. His book Regression and Other Stories is elementary but exceptionally well written. He describes how great Bayesian statisticians think and work, and this is invaluable.

He is updating Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models to the same standard, and I guess BDA will eventually come next. As part of the refresh, I imagine everything will be ported to Stan. Interestingly, Bob Carpenter and others working on Stan are now pursuing ideas on variational inference to scale things further.

[1] https://sites.stat.columbia.edu/gelman/research/unpublished/...