
Essentials of Statistics for Research
Author(s): Ken Gerow (Author), Jorge Navarro Alberto (Author)
- Publisher: Chapman and Hall/CRC
- Publication Date: December 5, 2025
- Edition: 1st
- Language: English
- Print length: 209 pages
- ISBN-10: 1041003900
- ISBN-13: 9781041003908
Book Description
Essentials of Statistics for Research offers a working introduction to essential statistical methods through an accessible conceptual approach without excessive mathematical details. The book emphasizes the importance of good judgment when choosing analysis approaches and illustrates the statistical analysis process through numerous examples. At its core, this text demonstrates how analysis should serve science and illuminate the stories contained within data.
Key Features
- Provides conceptual foundations of a practitioner's statistical toolkit, focusing on the role of normality, hypothesis tests, and confidence intervals
- Presents regression methods as core analytical tools while also covering t-based methods for comparing means among groups
- Demonstrates how logarithmic transformations capture relativity in relationships (such as exponential increase) rather than simply meeting statistical assumptions
- Includes over 100 graphs and visual representations to enhance understanding of statistical concepts
- Written in an engaging first-person voice that positions the authors as fellow learners alongside the reader
- Emphasizes stories, examples, and practical applications over abstract theory
This book is designed for researchers across a broad range of disciplines, from graduate students beginning their research journey to experienced professionals seeking a refresher on statistical methods. The accessible approach makes it particularly valuable for those who need to understand and apply statistical concepts without getting lost in mathematical complexity. Readers will gain practical knowledge they can immediately apply to their own research questions and data analysis challenges.
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Ken Gerow pours his life out into everything he does, so it's no surprise that he and Jorge have made a book that not only encapsulates thirty-plus years of teaching, but also a lifetime of experience. Essentials of Statistics for Researchers is not a textbook in the traditional sense. Rather, this book is a field guide on statistical thinking crafted with a tone that dismantles the fear surrounding mathematics and replaces it with curiosity and confidence. Through real-world examples, this book walks the reader through the use of essential statistical tools in a way that is accessible, informative, and engaging. So whether you're a practicing researcher, a student, or someone who swore statistics off all together, this book invites you back to the table with no judgement, just good teaching. This book is a must-have for any researcher."
~Carson Keeter, Lead Biostatistician, Department of Orthopaedics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, USA
“Are you a scientific researcher concerned about how all your data are to be analysed and whether you will do well enough to satisfy your referees or journal editors? If yes, this is the book for you. It is informal, friendly, and full of nuggets of wisdom borne out of long experience of collaborating with field scientists. You will have fun learning the tricks of the trade. Look for entertaining and informative anecdotes. There are some fun facts as well. The authors do a great job of motivating each technique. They go to the roots and talk about what the pioneers wanted to do and how they did it. If you are a field scientist, you may be surprised by references to issues you faced when you did the research. Pay attention to exercises. Doing them may give you new insights into the subject. Happy reading!”
~Anil Gore, Professor of Statistics, Pune University (Retired), India
About the Author
Ken Gerow, PhD, recently retired from the University of Wyoming, where, as a professor of statistics for over thirty years, he taught statistics to quantitative scientists from many disciplines. Dr. Gerow earned his PhD degree in Statistics at Cornell University. He is the author or a coauthor of over ninety research articles, books, and book chapters, in topics ranging from the molecular and cellular world to the visible world around us (plant, animal, and human systems). Ken considers himself to be a parasitic biologist because he only publishes with other people's data.
Jorge A. Navarro Alberto, PhD, is a professor emeritus at the Autonomous University of Yucatán, México, where he specialized in ecological and environmental statistics research. Dr. Navarro Alberto earned his PhD degree in Statistics at the University of Otago, New Zealand. His academic career spanned more than 36 years teaching statistics for biologists, marine biologists, and natural resource managers in Mexico, and as a visiting professor at the University of Wyoming, with a vast experience in teaching multivariate analysis courses for life scientists. He is the co-author of the last edition of the book Randomization, Bootstrap and Monte Carlo Methods in Biology, and the co-editor of Introduction to Ecological Sampling, published by CRC Press. After retirement, Jorge is still active in the professional and academic arenas, working as a (more relaxed) part-time statistical consultant, and as one of the associate editors of the international journal, Environmental and Ecological Statistics. He also member of the Mexican representation at the International Statistical Literacy Project, Finland.
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