This blog is essen­tially an online book I am writ­ing on doing research in sta­tis­tics. Top­ics cov­ered include LaTeX, R, writ­ing and prepar­ing a the­sis, writ­ing a jour­nal arti­cle, sub­mit­ting an arti­cle to a ref­er­eed jour­nal, how to con­vince edi­tors to pub­lish your work, and writ­ing ref­eree reports. I know there are other good resources out there that cover some of the same mate­r­ial, but there are none that take account of the big changes in research that have arisen due to e-print repos­i­to­ries, blogs, wikis and online inter­ac­tions, and none that are intended to be com­pre­hen­sive in cov­er­ing all aspects of learn­ing the craft of research in statistics.

Unlike a printed book, the order­ing of mate­r­ial does not mat­ter very much, and this resource is meant to be browsed, searched and sub­scribed, rather than read in any par­tic­u­lar sequence. Think of it as an online hand­book for PhD stu­dents in sta­tis­tics. The tar­get audi­ence is my own research team, but I hope it is of broader inter­est to other research sta­tis­ti­cians, and even researchers work­ing in other areas of math­e­mat­i­cal science.

As the site also func­tions as my blog, I occa­sion­ally throw in posts that are of more lim­ited inter­est (either to the Aus­tralian sta­tis­tics com­mu­nity or for peo­ple work­ing in my own research area of forecasting).

If you are look­ing for some­thing, try the search tool above, or click on a rel­e­vant topic to the right. Or you could browse by click­ing “Index” above. All recent addi­tions appear in chrono­log­i­cal order on the front page. But the best way to read new mate­r­ial is to sub­scribe to the RSS feed.

But I hope you will also book­mark the site (try click­ing the Share/Save but­ton below) and check here when­ever you are look­ing for infor­ma­tion on doing research in statistics.

Rob J Hyndman

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