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Samuel Harvey Shapiro (born Israel Shapiro; April 25, 1907 – March 16, 1987) was an American politician, the 34th governor of Illinois, serving from 1968 to 1969. He was a member of the Democratic Party .
Samuel Sanford Shapiro (July 13, 1930 – November 5, 2023) was an American statistician and engineer. He was a professor emeritus of statistics at Florida International University. He was known for his co-authorship of the Shapiro–Wilk test and the Shapiro–Francia test. A native of New York City, Shapiro graduated from City College of New ...
Samuel Shapiro may refer to: Samuel Shapiro (Illinois politician) (1907–1987), governor of Illinois. Samuel Shapiro (Maine politician) (born 1927), Maine politician. Shmuel Shapiro (born 1974), French Jewish rabbi, hazzan, and singer. Samuel Sanford Shapiro (1930–2023), statistician who developed the Shapiro–Wilk test.
The Shapiro–Wilk test tests the null hypothesis that a sample x1, ..., xn came from a normally distributed population. The test statistic is. where. with parentheses enclosing the subscript index i is the i th order statistic, i.e., the i th-smallest number in the sample (not to be confused with ). is the sample mean.
Samuel H. Shapiro Developmental Center, formerly named the Kankakee State Hospital, is a developmental center in Kankakee, Illinois, on the banks of the Kankakee River.
On March 15, 2019, The Philadelphia Inquirer released a front-page investigative report reviewing the suspicious circumstances surrounding Greenberg's death. [4] Pittsburgh forensic pathologist Cyril H. Wecht, who challenged the single-bullet theory of the John F. Kennedy assassination, reviewed the case, determined it was "strongly suspicious of homicide", and said he did not "know how they ...
v. t. e. The 1968 Illinois gubernatorial election was held in Illinois on November 5, 1968. [1] Democratic nominee, incumbent governor Samuel H. Shapiro (who had assumed the governorship in May 1968, after Otto Kerner Jr. resigned in order to accept a judicial appointment), lost reelection to Republican nominee Richard B. Ogilvie, who was the ...
Martin Wilk. Martin Bradbury Wilk, OC (18 December 1922 – 19 February 2013) [1][2] was a Canadian statistician, academic, and the former chief statistician of Canada. In 1965, together with Samuel Shapiro, he developed the Shapiro–Wilk test, which can indicate whether a sample of numbers would be unusual if it came from a Gaussian distribution.