Environmental Analyses (BIOL 505, Spring 2002)
Montana State University, Bozeman
Class hours: Monday/Wednesday/Friday 14:10 - 15:00
Last modified: Fri Mar 15 11:46:16 MST 2002
This is the homepage for Biology 505, Spring 2002 (D. Goodman).
This page will contain lecture notes, examples of programs (FORTRAN, Matlab, Java, and C), and any other relevant information to Dr. Goodman's lecture.
For any suggestions and questions regarding this homepage, please email
Tomo Eguchi.
Index:
Contact Information:
Dan Goodman: goodman@rivers.oscs.montana.edu
Tomo Eguchi: eguchi@montana.edu
Dan Hennen: hennen@torrent.msu.montana.edu
Nicole Wagner: nwagner@montana.edu
Eric Ward: eward@montana.edu
Matt Rinella: mrinella@montana.edu
Additional information:
- Here are some books and other additional papers/summary that are relevant to the class (in a random order):
- Multivariate Analysis, K. V. V. Mardia, J. T. Kent, and J. M. Bibby. Academic Press, 1980. (Recommended by Dr. Goodman)
- Applied Linear Statistical Models, J. Neter, M. H. Kutner, C. J. Nachtsheim, and W. Wasserman. IRWIN, 1996.
- Regression Analysis - Theory, Methods, and Applications, A. Sen and M. Srivastava. Springer, 1990.
- Matrix Analysis for Statistics, J. R. Schott, Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics, 1997.
- Randomization, Bootstrap and Monte Carlo Methods in Biology, B. F. J. Manly. Chapman and Hall. 1998.
- Methods of Multivariate Analyses, A. C. Rencher. Wiley Series in Probability and Mathematical Statistics. 1995. (This is an excellent text book. The book contains the basic linear algebra, nuts and bolts of several important multivariate statistical methods, ways to interpret the resutls, examples with real numbers, and intermediate calculations that are often omitted in other textbooks. It is used by Dr. Boik for a gradulate level multivariate statistics class in the statistics department.)
- Web sites of interest
Lecture Notes:
Programming: These programs have been tested but we don't guarantee that they will give you correct answers. To report problems and questions, contact programmers directly. (Programmer's initials in parentheses.)