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-Statistics Links-


 

This is a list of statistics resources Clay Helberg has discovered on the World Wide Web (WWW). . Enjoy!

Or other related questions. For answers, you might try Media Metrix or DoubleClick. I also can't tell you how many ophthamologists there are in Montana, or how many people visited Disneyland in 1997, or what the most popular brand of fish sticks is. For those, try LEXIS-NEXIS or DIALOG. Also see Paula Berenstein's nice book, Finding Statistics Online, which deals with such questions much better than I could.


Professional Organizations

Home page for AAAS. Information on membership, sections, science policy, and their flagship journal, Science.

American Mathematical Society's home page. Gives info on membership, activities, and other useful things like employment opportunities and a preprint server.

American Society for Quality (formerly American Society for Quality Control)

Offers information for those interested in quality issues. Site includes links for membership, calendar, a quality glossary, and information on Standards and Certification.

A very active professional organization for statisticians, ASA now has a home page. They have info on membership, upcoming events, publications, meetings, etc.

The Bernoulli Society is a section of the International Statistical Institute focusing on probability and mathematical statistics. Links to membership info and meetings.

The Classification Society of North America (CSNA) is a nonprofit interdisciplinary organization whose purposes are to promote the scientific study of classification and clustering (including systematic methods of creating classifications from data), and to disseminate scientific and educational information related to its fields of interests.

--Taken from the intro to the page

This is the IMS homepage. Contains info on membership, publications, meetings, etc. Also contains a list of statistics links.

RSS home page. Includes links to RSS news, conferences, membership info, committees, etc. Also includes a link to the RSS Centre for Statistical Education.

SIAM home page. Includes the standard links to membership info, conferences, publications, and career information (nice because it allows online browsing of job listings from their newsletter, SIAM News). Also some links to other math sites. The home page is graphics intensive, so be prepared to wait if using a slow Internet connection. (This is true only for the main home page--other pages at this site seem to be mostly text and transfer pretty quickly.)

SSC home page. Includes links to membership lists, by-laws, meetings, and their journal, Canadian Journal of Statistics


Institutes and Consulting Groups

Center for Biomedical Modeling Research (at the University of Nevada School of Medicine)

This site is a good place to look for biomedical applications. Includes information on datasets, software, neural networks, and even funding sources.

This site at the University of Glasgow focuses on learning technologies in higher education. They also have a list of statistics links.

Provides training and consultancy in decision support and general data analysis. They also redistribute several statistics-oriented software packages.

Provides statistical support for researchers in the School of Nursing and the Medical School at the University of Wisconsin.

Consulting in statistics, as well as papermaking.

Institute for Business and Industrial Statistics at the University of Amsterdam (IBIS UvA)

Consulting group specializing in SPC, Quality Control, and general statistical consulting. Page offers links to members of the group, their customers, research, courses, etc.

This non-profit organization promotes conferences and short courses for those who apply statistical methods to industrial problems. They also have a series ofpublications, including one by yours truly about pitfalls of data analysis.

This is the home page for the ISI, based in the Netherlands. Includes info from their newsletter, a section on upcoming events, and a statement of professional ethics.

This consulting group specializes in developing custom solutions for data analysis, reporting, and data warehousing. They offer a software product called Maestro for working with large datasets in SAS. They also offer a wide range of consulting services.

This company specializes in software for decision modeling and support. The document contains info on decision and risk analysis, operations research, and artificial intelligence.

This consulting group specializes in "Quality and Productivity Engineering". Provides support for industrial statistics for quality control and experimental design. A sample of their Quality Control software can be downloaded.

This group provides software and consulting for market research. Their web site offerings include demos of their software packages for perceptual mapping, statistical analysis, and marketing simulation.

This group specializes in design of experiments (DOE) consulting. They offer consulting services, short courses, and software. There is even a free online short course,Introduction and Rounding.

This group provides training in data analysis and modeling. You can find course listings, schedules, information on fees, and you can download course outlines in RTF format.

Adrian Esterman from down under offers advice and consultation via email or phone.

Provides statistical support to various government agencies, educational institutions, and businesses in the Washington, D.C. area. The company is employee owned, and offers free software for data analysis.

A nice resource for structural equation modeling. Includes pointers to SEM software makers, some publications, and information on meetings, and a list of members of the working group.


Educational Resources

This organization maintains several mailing lists to providing advice and tutoring for various content areas, including statistics. Also maintains a list of pertinent links to other academic resources on the web.

This is a very nice page by Eric Maass, geared toward engineering applications of statistics. Includes coverage of statistical distributions, SPC and time series, statistical analysis, experimental design, and optimization. Note: there are a few formatting quirks. The site is hosted by GeoCities, so it has that annoying watermark and pop-up advertisements. Also, the bulk of the content seems to be in the form of slides converted to HTML, but in many cases the conversion was not entirely successful (or at least doesn't appear so in my IE5.0).

This bibliography contains a wealth of resources for computational probability and statistics. Includes web links as well as traditional print references. Thanks to Prof. Hossein Arsham for this list.

Contains info on how statistics are used in daily life, providing lots of examples suitable for use in teaching of statistics.

A repository of stories and datafiles which illustrate various concepts in statistics and data analysis. Stories are organized both by content area and by methodology employed. Looks like a great teaching resources.

This is a great reference for educators or anyone who uses tests. Includes links to ERIC searching, a Test locator, and a list of FAQ's about uses of tests, among other things.

A nice site that covers the basics of exploratory data analysis (EDA). Site includes data files, articles, worksheets, and links as adjuncts to the main material.

A collection of online statistical procedures, which you can access from your web browser. These are actual routines that take data (entered via a form) and return statistical results. Includes some CGI routines and some Java routines.

This is page contains data files, examples, etc. mostly designed for use with two statistics texts written by the Prof. Howell, Fundamental Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, 3rd ed., and Statistical Methods for Psychology, 3rd ed.

This page gives a nice overview of factor analysis, as it might be used in chemical analysis problems.

This site features a couple of papers by Don Macnaughton regarding his plan for an improved method of teaching introductory statistics, which he calls the "Entity-Property-Relationship" approach. Interesting reading!

A nice list of Java applets from around the web which can be used to explore or illustrate statistical concepts. Requires a Java-savvy web browser, e.g. Netscape 2.0 or later.

This site has lots of information and links related to data mining, or extracting information from large datasets.

Warren Sarle of the SAS Institute has put together this very useful resource reviewing the foundations of measurement, and the relationship between measurement theory and statistics.

This page deals with multilevel models in general, and their analysis with Harvey Goldstein's MLn software in particular. A useful resource for anyone who deals with hierarchically structured data.

This is an interesting page which uses images and quicktime movies to illustrate statistical concepts. Kudos to Berrie Zielman for putting together this resource.

An amusing site which enlists our cartoon heroes to aid the "Graduate Student" (complete with mortarboard, sunglasses, and a smoke hangin' out of his mouth) in explaining multiple regression in the context of usability testing. IMO, the Ren and Stimpy graphics get annoying after a little while, but I'm all in favor of spicing up statistics education, so I won't complain too loudly. ;-)

Home page of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and the National Research Council. Resources are broken down by content area. Lots of publications to be found here.

This fascinating site includes portraits (i.e. photos and/or paintings) of many famous statisticians. Most of the statisticians featured are historical (i.e. dead), but many contemporary statisticians are featured as well. If you've always wondered what Rev. Bayes or Sir R. A. Fisher looked like, here's your chance to find out!

This is a nice list of puzzles to sharpen your probability skills. Brought to you by Arlet Ottens.

This is a fantastic resource which gives guidelines for various types of statistical analysis, as well as a basic glossary.

This is a clearinghouse of information on recursive partitioning methods in statistics (more commonly known as "tree-based methods"), including CART, QUEST, C5.0, etc. Includes links to a handy bibliography list and a mailing list devoted to recursive partitioning issues.

This web site offers info, references, examples and pointers for the method of resampling (related to bootstrapping and the jackknife). Maintained by the makers ofResampling Stats, a program designed for bootstrapping and Monte Carlo simulation.

Research Methods Resources from Arizona State U

This is a nice site offering resources for research in psychology and education. Included is the Visualization Theatre, and the delightful Random Statistics Quote

A nice site at Rice University, featuring the HyperStat online text, as well as Java applets and other statistical tools and case studies. A nice resource for teaching statistics.

This is a nice page of information about various commonly used statistical techniques. It looks like some of the references were culled from discussions on the statistics newsgroups, though many were written by Rich himself. There is also an updated version.

This is a great list of references for scientific visualization. Available in HTML, RTF, plain text, and tokenized database entries.

A nice explanation of Simpson's paradox, which basically concerns cases where means of subgroups show a different pattern than the overall means collapsed across groups. Includes some nice examples, both fictitious and real.

spss.org by Vijay Gupta

This site focuses on helping users get the most out of SPSS. Also has some excel-oriented materials. Note that this site is not affiliated with SPSS Inc.

This site offers interactive statistical education software (for Windows or Mac), as well as a very nice online statistics glossary.

Statistics at lerner.org

This is a nice site that gives an overview of how statistics are used in polling. Designed to help people interpret poll results more accurately.

This page was put together by Gary Ramseyer at Illinois State University, who also put together the Archives of Statistics Fun page, featuring interesting stories and anecdotes.

This site has a series of informative pages and online statistical calculators, covering such topics as descriptive statistics, Fisher's exact test, ANOVA, chi-square, and OLS regression.

The title pretty much says it all. Covers variables, the more popular statistical distributions, CLT, confidence limits and two-sample tests. Also includes a guide to theGreek alphabet, and a very brief glossary.

A nice reference put together by Steve Simon. It includes such nice things as "Ask Dr. Mean", where you can submit questions to the good doctor, case studies, and a guide to reading journal articles. Emphasis is on medical statistics.

This is a draft of a bibliography on survey research. Looks like a nice list of pointers.

A set of resources for teaching statistics to undergraduate students, including LispStat routines. From my alma mater, Iowa State University.

List of papers by UCLA Stat faculty, some software demos, and an interesting Hypertext Intro Stat Textbook (currently under construction). Also home of variousdistribution and density calculators, featuring the latest in web technology, including JavaScript and various creative uses of CGI scripts.

Info on the University of Washington's graduate program in statistics, code, tech-reports, and pointers to other University of Washington sources.

Lots of good stuff from our very own statistics department. Includes tech-reports, software archives, and, for those of us lucky enough to actually be logging in from UW-Madison, an search interface to the Current Index to Statistics. Also lots of links to other sites.

This site contains a selection of statistical methods implemented as JavaScript code in the pages. You can do limited data analysis with these "scriptlets". The pages also show results of intermediate calculations (sums, means, marginal counts for crosstables, etc.), which makes them good for seeing what goes on "under the hood".

Subtitled "the Engineers Ultimate Guide to Wavelet Analysis", this site gives a nice introduction to the subject of wavelets and multiresolution analysis. Nice for beginners, takes you from motivation for frequency-based transforms through Fourier transforms and on to multiresolution analysis.

This site contains a wealth of tax and financial information and references, including some very interesting listings on statistical evidence in litigation and use of sampling in audits.

Statistics courses on the web

Note: My goal is to include links to sites which actually provide teaching materials (e.g. lecture notes, tutorials, practice problems, etc.) on the web. I probably won't link to sites which are merely syllabi or course outlines. If you have questions about this policy, send me email.

Statistics Textbooks on the web


Publications

Chapman and Hall was recently acquired by CRC Press. You can find information about Chapman & Hall books and journals at their site.

This page gives information on how to order the main bibliographic index for statistics. Based at University of Chicago

Home page of Duxbury Press, which specializes in industrial statistics and statistics education. Site features an online catalog.

This is a very nice online journal, published by Elsevier Science.

An online statistics journal, published quarterly and offering abstracts and complete articles in PDF or PostScript format.

Contains articles from the Journal of Statistics Education (as you might expect), as well as EDSTAT-L (AKA newsgroup sci.stat.edu) and STAT-L (AKA newsgroup sci.stat.consult) archives. Also includes pointers to other discussion groups, software, etc. There is also a Gopher server, which you can try if you have trouble getting through on the Web.

The UCLA Statistics department publishes this online journal. Content is self evident from the title.

Dekker publishes lots of fine technical books.

McGraw-Hill publishes numerous statistics textbooks, under their Irwin and WCB banners.

Lots of good statistics books here. Note that the above link is to their North American web site. Their official UK website is here.

 

This company publishes lots of quantitative books, including those handy little green books, the Quantitative Applications in the Social Sciences series.

This company specializes in scientific and technical publishing. Samples of some of their chapters are available in Adobe Acrobat format.

Well known in the statistics community for their Wiley Series in Probability and Mathematical Statistics, they have a web page featuring information on their publications (including journals), as well as some online offerings. Information on specific titles is available from their online catalog.


Software-oriented Pages

Note: I am currently employed by SPSS, Inc. However, in the information presented below, I have tried to remain objective in providing accurate descriptions of products and web sites. If you see something that you think betrays a bias, please feel free to drop me a note about it. On the other hand, if you ask me for advice about software, I will not hold back my opinions about the products I'm familiar with, including (especially) SPSS.

This is Paul Velleman's highly acclaimed computerized statistics tutorial. At this site you can find the usual info about the software, examples showing how it works, and various teacher support materials.

Has information about the structural equation modeling package AMOS written by James Arbuckle. A very nice, easy to use package. You can specify your model just by drawing it. Also has nice features for handling of missing data. Includes links to a demo version of the software.

Analyse-It for Microsoft Excel

An Excel add-in for Clinical Laboratory research to analyse accuracy, precision and interpret diagnostic test results. Includes Altman-Bland, Deming, Passing & Bablok, Reference ranges, ROC curve, Screening, and NCCLS precision. A demo is available.

A package that performs a number of useful statistical calculations. Intended for psychologists and other social scientists. A demo is available.

Autobox is a tool for forecasting/time series analysis. Web site includes links to the software as well as documentation and a list of the company's clients. Home page layout is rather bizarre, but with a little poking around you can find what you want without too much trouble.

BMDP, Inc. has been bought out by SPSS, Inc. SPSS is now distributing BMDP products, including BMDP Classic and Diamond (now SPSS Diamond). If you need a BMDP product that SPSS no longer distributes, you might try contacting Statistical Solutions, Ltd. in Cork, Ireland.

This is the home of the freeware software package R. R is very similar to S in many respects, and some refer to it as an S clone, though there are some importantdifferences. R is distributed under the GNU copyleft.

This company specializes in software for exact tests (or permutation tests), typically used with small-sample categorical data. They publish StatXact for general permutation tests, LogXact for exact logistic regression, and EaSt, for planning sequential clinical trials.

This is Paul Velleman's exploratory data analysis tool for the Macintosh. Lots of neat graphics to help you get a handle on relationships in your data. A demo is available for this program.

Purveyors of a handful of statistical and numerical analysis products, including StatMost (statistical analysis), Numerica (numerical analysis), and DataTrix (a spreadsheet-type package).

DBMS/Copy (Conceptual Software)

This very handy software package allows you to convert data from any of a huge variety of formats into any other of a huge variety of formats. This is a must-have tool for heterogeneous statistical computing environments. They also offer a SAS-specific product, DBMS/Engines, which allows SAS users to read and write data in a myriad of formats directly from SAS.

This company publishes software for interval-based calculations, both as an Excel add-in and as a set of C++ libraries.

This is a simple package which specializes in ANOVA/ANCOVA models. Information is also available in German.

This is a Windows stats package. You can download a demo version, which is fully functional except that it only allows 20 variables.

Has lots of information about Epi Info, a freeware epidemiological statistics program. The author of this page (Greg Fegan) publishes some books on using Epi Info, and give links to the software itself, as well as other resources for users of the package.

EViews is a forecasting product with an emphasis on econometrics from Quantitative Micro Software (QMS--not to be confused with the printer company).

This is a general statistical package, available for Windows or Mac. Lists a couple of texts as "related book titles", but it's unclear if these books actually refer to this package, or if they just cover some of the methods implemented by the program.

GraphPad Prism combines scientific graphics, nonlinear regression and statistics. GraphPad InStat guides biologists step-by-step through basic statistical tests, with plenty of explanations.

This is a resource maintained by NIST. The title pretty much says it all. It offers a useful "problem decision tree" approach to indexing.

This software specializes in multidimensional data analysis (a la OLAP)--not to be confused with multivariate analysis (which is something quite different). You canrequest a demo version of their software packages, including Interleap Basics and Interleap Regressions.

This group provides consulting services, as well as distributing a handful of shareware statistics packages such as SIMSTAT, MVSP, and Oriana. Also includes a list of sites.

This freeware package features extensive matrix computation capabilities, as well as a wide variety of standard statistical methods. Don't be fooled by the name--this package is available for Windows as well as Macintosh, and source code is available if you want to compile it on your UNIX workstation. Documentation is also available if you want to check it out before downloading.

This program offers 1D and 2D wavelet analysis (a form of multiresolution frequency analysis) for Macintosh users. A demo version is available, and the manual is available online.

MAREG is a package for doing marginal regression, a procedure designed to control for correlated observations. In addition to the software (available for DOS, Solaris, and Win9x/WinNT), you can also get information about the method itself.

Mathematical Software Archives at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville

This is a nice archive, featuring reviews of software, as well as interactive texts (e.g. Mathematica notebooks), and links to other resources.

This statistics package is aimed at biomedical researchers. Links are provided to documentation (in Word 6.0 format), and a demo version of the program.

Home page of Minitab statistical software. Includes the standard product information, technical support, software macros, etc. See their extensive list of companion textbooks for use with their software.

MIXOR/MIXREG home page

This is a series of packages for multi-level modeling written by Don Hedeker and Robert Gibbons. Packages include MIXREG for continuous responses, MIXPREG for multilevel Poisson regression, MIXOR for ordinal responses, MIXGSUR for multilevel survival analysis, and MIXNO for mixed-effects nominal logistic regression analysis. Packages are available for DOS and Windows. Software is free.

This is a nice little package put together by Robert C. Knodt to fill a perceived void in the area of affordable statistics software. A small no-frills package that offers lots of standard tests, and has a very reasonable license fee. You can get a free month trial of the software by contacting the author.

This is a support page for the Mx software package, useful for statistics (particularly structural equation modeling) as well as general matrix algebra computations. Developed by Michael Neale.

The home page of the statistical software package NCSS (Number Cruncher Statistical System). Includes link to freeware probability calculator for Windows, and aFreeware version of NCSS suitable for teaching or relatively simple data analysis.

The netlib server (maintained by AT&T and U. Tenn.) has lots of math and statistics routines.

Interesting forms-based multivariate analysis system. Enter your data via a form (or upload via anonymous FTP), and select PCA, Correspondence Analysis, or Multiple correspondence analysis, and off you go! Results are computed online and returned to your browser. Based on the ADE-4 engine, which you can download as well.

This program uses computer-intensive methods (e.g. randomization tests) for nonparametric tests. Also gives a nice reading list on computer-intensive nonparametric methods and statistics in general.

This is a general purpose statistical software package, with an optional sequence analysis module. From NIH's National Center for Research Resources.

Instructional software from Five Bear Production. Offers multimedia instructional software on ANOVA, power analysis, partialling techniques, and the central limit theorem.

This company provides software tools for design of experiments, statistical process control, measurement process evaluation, and multivariate modeling. Demos are due sometime in January, 1999.

This company distributes the popular CART software, as well as the newer MARS package. The site also includes some useful whitepapers on the CART and MARS methods.

This server provides information on the SAS Institute and its products and services, including JMP for interactive data analysis. It even has a listing of job openings at the Institute. Good for SAS users. Allows access to files on their BBS.

SciTech is a clearinghouse for all kinds of scientific software, from Astronomy to Chemistry to Social Sciences. They have a huge selection of commercial statistics software. I never knew there were so many packages available!

Provides information on (and demos of) SIMSTAT and MVSP (MultiVariate Statistical Program), as well as the special-purpose STATITEM (for item analysis), EASY FACTOR ANALYSIS, and BANNER programs.

SpaceStat is a program for spatial data analysis, developed at the Regional Research Institute at West Virginia University. Info on capabilities, platforms, and pricing can be found here, as well as online demos.

Brought to you by Mathsoft. Here you will find product information, consulting, and their newsletter, S-Press.

Yes, the makers of the very popular SPSS software package (and my current employers). This page gives info on their products, technical support, services, andpublications.

This page gives info on the Stata stat package. You can get in-depth product information, tech support stuff for users, and a list of other statistical software companies. They also offer NetCourses in how to use their software.

This page supports the STATGRAPHICS package for Windows. Site includes obligatory product and contact information, tech support, and a snazzy Graphics Gallery. You can also get additional info on the program and training from the Statistical Graphics Corporation.

This vendor of statistical software is located in Cork, Ireland. They still offer many of BMDP's pre-buyout packages.

This is a fantastic source of info--includes lots of datasets and code (xlispstat, R, BLSS, etc.), as well as info on ASA and IMS.

A low-cost statistical package. Seems to have a slight biostatistics bent to it.

From the makers of Statistica, this web page gives information, excerpts from review articles, and testimonials about their software. The front page is somewhat graphics-intensive, so be prepared to wait....

This is another nice package for converting files from one format to another. Lets you access those legacy data files and easily convert them for use with your current tool, or exchange data with your colleagues who may not use the same stats package that you do. A demo is available.

This long-time staple for Macintosh users is now available for Windows as well. The package is now supported by the SAS Institute.

Home page of Statware, makers of the Statit series of graphical data analysis packages. Site offers the usual product descriptions, contact information, and an astonishing array of demos available for a wide variety of platforms--including several flavors of UNIX.

"SUDAAN software is specifically designed for the analysis of clustered data arising in many applications, including complex sample surveys, randomized experiments, and epidemiologic studies."

This is a nice resource from the Survey Research Methods Section of the ASA. Gives some comparative information on a variety of software packages for analyzing data with complex sampling schemes, and references to published review articles.

This software is designed for, you guessed it, surveys. Handles survey research from questionnaire design to data entry. Add-on modules provide capabilities for multiple response variables, voice capture, and statistical analysis. Site also includes a simple sample size calculator.

This is former SPSS product, geared for scientific research, is now an independent entity once again.

This is a complete statistics package which offers easy integration with Microsoft Office (supports OLE/DDE). A demo is available which only works with the canned data sets provided. For Windows only.

Forrest Young's ViSta homepage. Vista is a GUI stats package based on the XLispStat engine. You can download it from here (it's free). Available for Mac, Windows, and Unix.

This is an Excel add-in that offers cool data visualization tools for Excel users. A demo is available. Made by Data Description, makers of DataDesk and ActivStats.

The home of WINKS, the Windows successor to KwikStat. The site includes the usual product descriptions and demos, as well as some useful tutorials and an onlinebookstore.

Another Microsoft Office-friendly offering, here's a multivariate package that uses Microsoft Excel as it's engine. Shareware and Professional versions are available, as is a demo version.

This is a set of Excel notebooks designed for teaching and basic statistical analysis. Written by Rodney Carr at Deakin University Warrmanbool.


Other lists of links

A great collection of educational resources for a wide range of areas. Includes lists for Statistics and Mathematics. Maintained by Jack Inglis-Arkell.

This is Ken Varnum and Jon Weise's venerable list of statistics resources. Very nice, lots of links--put a bookmark here!

Rainer W�rl�nder's Home Page for Statisticians

A nice collection of references, including some German-language resources.

This is a huge list of links which puts my feeble efforts to shame. In particular they have lots of links to academic statistics departments. Well, perhaps someday I'll catch up to them...

Joel West provides a useful list of resources, including nice pages on Macintosh Statistics resources and Structural Equation Modeling.

A nice list of links from the Computational Mathematics Group at the University of Vienna. Contains sections for the author's own work, philosophy, statistics guides, software libraries, links, software, data, bibliographies, conferences, and applications.

This is a collection of links mainly focusing on probability resources, with some more general statistics links as well. There's plenty here to keep a statistician busy for a few spare hours....

A valuable list of sources for data files.

A nice list maintained by Rob Hyndman at Monash University (Australia).

A list of useful statistics references aimed at astronomers. From the Astrostatistics Research Group at Penn State.

A nice annotated list of links related to or useful for statistics education.

Here is a specialized list offering help in finding a statistics-oriented job. Features job listing sites, companies that hire statisticians, and government agencies. By Jim Box at Duke University.

This is the FAQ file for the STAT-L mailing list (AKA sci.stat.consult on Usenet). It has some nice links, and some important info regarding use of the mailing list. Thanks to Steve Simon for putting it together, and to David Ronis for putting it on the web.

A nice list from Charlie Hallahan at the USDA. His index is a bit more detailed than mine.

This is a well-organized collection of links from around the web. Sites are listed by Academia, Data mining, and Stock market. There is also a useful library section, and a "lifestyle" section which seems to be only tangentially related to statistics.

A great resource, including sections on statistical software, publications, data mining, meetings, and university statistics departments.

A nice collection of links, categorized by procedures (ANOVA, Discriminant Analysis, etc.).

This is a list of resources from the University of Florida. Most notable is its list of documents from statistics departments of universities worldwide.


Basic Statistics Sites

International statistical services

United Nations organisations

Organisation

Statistics Unit

Statistics Website

United Nations Secretariat

UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA)

United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD)

unstats

UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA)

United Nations Population Division (UNPD)

Population Information Network

United Nations specialized agencies and related organisations

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

Statistics division

Statistics

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

 

(IAEA)

International Labour Organization (ILO)

Department of Statistics (STAT)

Statistics and databases

International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Statistics Department

Data and Statistics

International Telecommunication Union (ITU)

ICT Data and Statistics (IDS)

ICT Data and Statistics

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization(UNESCO)

UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS)

Institut of statistics

United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)

Development Policy, Statistics and Research Branch

unido.org DPSRB

Universal Postal Union (UPU)

 

postal-statistics

World Bank Group (World Bank)

Development Economics Data Group (DECDG)

Data

World Health Organization (WHO)

Health Statistics and Information Systems (HSI)

data and statistics

World Tourism Organization (UNWTO)

Statistics and Tourism Satellite Account Programme

Statistics

World Trade Organization (WTO)

Economic Research and Statistics Division

Statistics

United Nations funds and programmes

Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (HCR)

Field Information and Coordination Support section

Statistics & Operational Data

United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)

 

statistics and monitoring

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Development Statistics and Information Branch

Statistics

United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

 

Research & Publications

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)

 

(UNEP)

United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT)

Monitoring and Research division

Global Urban Observatory

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)

 

Statistics

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)

 

Data for Development

United Nations Regional Commissions

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)

African Centre for Statistics

ACS

United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (ECE)

Statistical Division

Statistics

United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)

Statistics division

Portada

United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP)

Statistics Division

Statistics

United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia(ESCWA)

Statistics Division

Statistics Division

Statistical training institutions in United Nations System

Statistical Institute for Asia and the Pacific (SIAP)

 

(SIAP)

Intergovernmental Development and Central Banks

Organisation

Statistics Unit

Statistics Website

Intergovernmental Development Banks

African Development Bank (AfDB)

Statistics Department

Statistics

Asian Development Bank (ADB)

Economics and Research Department (ERD)

Data

Caribbean Development Bank (CDB)

Economics Department

Economics statistics

European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)

Office of the Chief Economist

Economics data

Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)

Department of Research and Chief Economist

Statistics and Databases

Islamic Development Bank (IsDB)

Data Resource and Statistics Department

 

Intergovernmental Central Banks

Bank for International Settlements (BIS)

Statistics and Research Support

Statistics

Bank of Central African States (BEAC)

 

Statistiques

Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)

Direction de la Recherche et de la Statistique

Statistiques

Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB)

Statistics Department

Statistics

European Central Bank (ECB)

Statistics (Directorate general)

Statistics

Regional intergovernmental organisations

Organisation

Statistics Unit

Statistics Website

African Union (AU)

Statistics Division

Statistics

The Economic and Statistical Observatory of Sub-Saharan Africa (AFRISTAT)

General Directorate

afristat.org

Andean Community of Nations (CAN)

 

Estadisticas

Arab Maghreb Union (AMU)

 

Statistics

Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)

Policy Support Unit

ApecStats

Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)

Statistics Division

ASEANSTATS

Caribbean Community (CARICOM)

Statistics Sub-programme

Caricomstats

Central American Integration System (SICA)

 

Regional statistics

Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA)

Statistical program

Comstat

Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN-SAD)

   

Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)

Interstate Statistical Committee (CISSTAT)

Cisstat

Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)

 

Statistics

East African Community (EAC)

 

Statistics

Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS)

   

Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

Research and Statistics Directorate

Ecostat

European Free Trade Association (EFTA)

EFTA Statistical Office

Statistics

European Union (EU)

Eurostat

Eurostat

Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD)

   

League of Arab states (LAS)

 

Statistical Reports

Mercosur (MERCOSUR)

Macroeconomic Monitoring Group (GMM)

Statistics

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)

Statistics Directorate

Statistics Directorate

Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS)

 

Statistics and data

Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)

see SESRIC below

Department statistics

Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC)

Statistics for Development Division

Statistics for Development

South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC)

 

SAARCSTAT

Southern African Development Community (SADC)

Statistics

Statistics

West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU)

Direction des Études Statistiques et Économiques

 

 

 

Statistics and Biostatistics Links

 

Statistics Links : http://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~neum/stat.html 

Getting Started:

APA Style, Writing, and Publication Tips:

General Resources:

Survey Research:

Measurement and Testing:

General Resources:

Data Visualization:

Online Statistics Textbooks:

Online Statistical Calculations:

Power Analysis:

Additional Statistics Resources: