Everything about Frank Yates totally explained
Frank Yates (
May 12,
1902 -
June 17,
1994) was one of the pioneers of
20th century statistics. He was born in
Manchester.
Yates was the eldest of five children, and the only boy, born to Edith and Percy Yates. His father was a seed merchant. He attended a private school Wadham House, before obtaining a scholarship to attend
Clifton College in 1916. After four years at Clifton he obtained a
Cambridge University scholarship to study at
St John's College and four years later graduated with a First Class Honours degree.
He spent two years teaching
mathematics to secondary school pupils before heading to
Africa where he was mathematical advisor on the Gold Coast Survey. He returned to
England due to ill health and met and married a chemist, Margaret Forsythe Marsden, the daughter of a
civil servant. This marriage was dissolved in 1933 and he later married Pauline Penn, previously the partner of the well-known architect. After Pauline's death in 1976 he married Ruth Hunt, his long-time secretary.
In 1931 he was appointed assistant statistician at
Rothamsted Experimental Station by
R.A. Fisher. In 1933 he became head of statistics when Fisher obtained a position at
University College London. At Rothamsted he worked on the
design of experiments, including contributions to the theory of
analysis of variance and originating Yates' algorithm and the balanced incomplete
block design.
During
World War II he worked on what would later be called
operational research.
After the war he worked on
sample survey design and analysis. He became an enthusiast of electronic
computers, in 1954 obtaining an
Elliott 401 for Rothamsted and contributing to the initial development of
statistical computing. In he was awarded the
Guy Medal in Gold of the
Royal Statistical Society, and in 1966 he was awarded the
Royal Medal of the
Royal Society. He retired from Rothamsted in 2000 came a Senior Research Fellow at
Imperial College London.
Publications included:
- The design and analysis of factorial experiments, Technical Communication no. 35 of the Commonwealth Bureau of Soils (1937) (alternatively attributed to the Imperial Bureau of Soil Science).
- Statistical tables for biological, agricultural and medical research (1938, coauthor R.A. Fisher) sixth edition
- Sampling methods for censuses and surveys (1949)
- Computer programs GENFAC, RGSP, Fitquan.
He died in 1994, aged 92, in
Harpenden.
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