A brief history of numbers and statistics with cytometric applications

Cytometry. 2001 Feb 15;46(1):1-22. doi: 10.1002/1097-0320(20010215)46:1<1::aid-cyto1032>3.0.co;2-3.

Abstract

A brief history of numbers and statistics traces the development of numbers from prehistory to completion of our current system of numeration with the introduction of the decimal fraction by Viete, Stevin, Burgi, and Galileo at the turn of the 16th century. This was followed by the development of what we now know as probability theory by Pascal, Fermat, and Huygens in the mid-17th century which arose in connection with questions in gambling with dice and can be regarded as the origin of statistics. The three main probability distributions on which statistics depend were introduced and/or formalized between the mid-17th and early 19th centuries: the binomial distribution by Pascal; the normal distribution by de Moivre, Gauss, and Laplace, and the Poisson distribution by Poisson. The formal discipline of statistics commenced with the works of Pearson, Yule, and Gosset at the turn of the 19th century when the first statistical tests were introduced. Elementary descriptions of the statistical tests most likely to be used in conjunction with cytometric data are given and it is shown how these can be applied to the analysis of difficult immunofluorescence distributions when there is overlap between the labeled and unlabeled cell populations.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cell Count / statistics & numerical data*
  • Computers
  • Fluorescent Antibody Technique
  • Mathematics*
  • Statistics as Topic*