The Lady Tasting Coffee: A Case Study in Experimental Design
The Lady Tasting Coffee: A Case Study in Experimental Design
The Lady Tasting Coffee: A Case Study in Experimental Design
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fisher.html
At Rothamsted, Fisher recognized problems with
some of the agricultural experiments
Same field, same treatment, but
plant performance is uneven...
Thin
Thick
Growth
Fisher’s Solution:
Growth
Replicate and
randomize to spread
variation evenly
among treatments.
At Rothamsted, Fisher saw firsthand that the purpose of good experimental design
is not to eliminate variation entirely, but rather to try to ensure that extraneous
variation is spread evenly among treatments. In the case of ANOVA, the
experimental design can enable the variation to be partitioned mathematically
during analysis.
Afternoon tea during study abroad experience by University of Pittsburgh at Bradford students at the
University of Sussex in Brighton, Great Britain. Copyright © Janelle Elmquist. Used with permission.
So, you think statistics is boring . . .
Statisticians and the history of
statistics are far from boring.
Other interesting trivia on Fisher:
-Charming but had a terrible temper
(and a big ego)
-Smoked a pipe & argued
professionally in the 1950’s that
smoking did not cause cancer
-Supported eugenics
Picture taken from:
Parascandola, M. (2004). "Two approaches to etiology:
the debate over smoking and lung cancer in the
1950s." Endeavour 28(2): 81-86.
Take Home Messages
• The 1920’s was a rich time for the development of concepts
of modern experimental design.
• Fisher was one of a number of statisticians who greatly
affected the development of modern statistics.
• Fisher’s experience at Rothamsted Agricultural Experiment
Station influenced his vision of experimental design and
helped him develop the concept of ANOVA .
• Fisher’s essay on a lady tasting tea eloquently outlines some
important issues in experimental design.
To learn more, read the biographies of
statisticians as you learn their techniques
The Student’s t-test
Student is the pseudonym of William Sealy Gosset, a
contemporary of Fisher who worked for Guiness, the Irish
brewery.
Other techniques
Many statistical techniques are named after interesting
historical people:
Bayes, Bernoulli, Cochran, Cox, Kolmogorov, Mann, Pearson, Smirnov, Tukey, Whitney, Wilcoxon
to name just a few
• Salsburg, D. 2002. The Lady Tasting Tea: How Statistics Revolutionized Science in
the Twentieth Century. Henry Holt and Company, NY.
• Stigler, S. M. 1999. Statistics on the Table: The History of Statistical Concepts and
Methods. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.