from the following data calculate the Karl Marx coefficient of skewness
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Answer:
the end of the nineteenth century, the content and practice of statistics underwent a series of transitions that led to its emergence as a highly specialised mathematical discipline. These intellectual and later institutional changes were, in part, brought about by a mathematical-statistical translation of Charles Darwin's redefinition of the biological species as something that could be viewed in terms of populations. Karl Pearson and W.F.R. Weldon's mathematical reconceptualisation of Darwinian biological variation and "statistical" population of species in the 1890s provided the framework within which a major paradigmatic shift occurred in statistical techniques and theory. Weldon's work on the shore crab in Naples and Plymouth from 1892 to 1895 not only brought them into the forefront of ideas of speciation and provided the impetus to Pearson's earliest statistical innovations, but it also led to Pearson shifting his professional interests from having had an established career as a mathematical physicist to developing one as a biometrician. The innovative statistical work Pearson undertook with Weldon in 1892 and later with Francis Galton in 1894 enabled him to lay the the foundations of modern mathematical statistics. While Pearson's diverse publications, his eastablishment of four laboratories and the creation of new academic departments underscore the plurality of his work, the main focus of his life-long career was in the establishment and promulgation of his statistical methodology.
Journal Information
The International Statistical Review (ISR) is the flagship journal of the International Statistical Institute and of its constituent sections (the Bernoulli Society for Mathematical Statistics and Probability, the International Association for Official Statistics, the International Association for Statistical Computing, the International Association for Statistical Education, the International Association of Survey Statisticians and the International Society for Business and Industrial Statistics). The ISR is widely circulated and subscribed to by individuals and institutions in all parts of the world. The main aim of the ISR is to publish papers of an expository, review, or tutorial nature that will be of wide interest to readers. Such papers may or may not contain strictly original material. All papers are refereed