Tukey's range test, also called Tukey method, Tukey's honest significance test, Tukey's HSD (Honestly Significant Difference) test
Test cricket | Test | Cascade Range | Crash Test Dummies | Range Rover | Great Dividing Range | mountain range | test pilot | River Test | Range Busters | White Sands Missile Range | test | Iron Range | Common Admission Test | Whalley Range | VHF omnidirectional range | Turing test | Test Pilot | Rorschach test | Old Dalby Test Track | John Tukey | Woomera Test Range | The Old Grey Whistle Test | Test Match Special | Range Rover Sport | Oregon Coast Range | Hamersley Range | Test Valley | Test pilot | Test Icicles |
It is identical to a Tukey mean-difference plot, the name by which it is known in other fields, but was popularised in medical statistics by J. Martin Bland and Douglas G. Altman.
Among many contributions to civil society, Tukey served on a committee of the American Statistical Association that produced a report challenging the conclusions of the Kinsey Report, Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.
From 2005-06 he was the co-host of the television show People, Places, and Plants with Paul Tukey on HGTV.
In statistics, the Siegel–Tukey test, named after Sidney Siegel and John Tukey, is a non-parametric test which may be applied to data measured at least on an ordinal scale.
Whilst the German mathematician Otto Hölder (1901) anticipated features of the theory of conjoint measurement, it was not until the publication of Luce & Tukey's seminal 1964 paper that the theory received its first complete exposition.