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Egon Pearson

 
Statistics Dictionary: Egon Sharpe Pearson

(1895–1980; b. London, England; d. Midhurst, Sussex) English mathematical statistician and the only son of Karl Pearson. Egon Pearson went up to Cambridge U in 1914, leaving after a year because of the First World War, when he worked at the Admiralty (his health was too poor for active combat). After the war, he started graduate work in astronomy. In 1921 he joined his father on the faculty at UCL, where he remained (retiring as Head of Department in 1960). Egon's association with Neyman started in 1926 and led to the Neyman–Pearson lemma and the development of a standard approach to hypothesis testing. He was Editor of Biometrika from 1936 to 1965. He was President of the RSS from 1955 to 1957 and was awarded its Guy Medal in Gold in 1955. He was elected FRS in 1966.



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Egon Sharpe Pearson (Hampstead, 11 August 1895London, 12 June 1980) was the only son of Karl Pearson, and like his father, a leading British statistician. He went to Winchester School and Trinity College, Cambridge, and succeeded his father as professor of statistics at University College London and as editor of the journal Biometrika. He was President of the Royal Statistical Society in 1955–56, and was awarded its Guy Medal in Gold in 1955. Pearson is best known for development of the Neyman-Pearson lemma of statistical hypothesis testing.

On 31 August 1934 Egon Pearson had married (Dorothy) Eileen (1901/2–1949), younger daughter of Russell Jolly, solicitor; they had two daughters. It was a great personal loss when his wife died from pneumonia in 1949, though he kept on their Hampstead house with the aid of a housekeeper, until 1967 when he moved to Cambridge after marrying (on 11 January) Margaret Theodosia (1896/7–1975), widow of Laurence Beddome Turner, reader emeritus in engineering, Cambridge, and second daughter of George Frederick Ebenezer Scott, architect, and Mrs Bernard Turner, of Godstowe School, High Wycombe.


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Statistics Dictionary. A Dictionary of Statistics. Second edition revised. Copyright © Oxford University Press, 2008. All rights reserved.  Read more
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