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Statistics and Data Handling for Biologists: A Student's Guide

by Millar, Neil

  • Paperback £31.99
  • New Book Availability : Usually available within 5 day(s)
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  • Catalogue No : 63033
  • ISBN : 9781784275709
  • Published : NOV 2025
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 240
  • Hardback £49.99
  • New Book Availability : Usually available within 5 day(s)
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  • Catalogue No : 63034
  • ISBN : 9781784275693
  • Published : NOV 2025
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 240

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Description:

* A practical and comprehensive introduction to data handling and analysis for undergraduate biology students.

* Appropriate for all branches of the biological sciences, including genetics, biochemistry, physiology, ecology and medicine.

* Covers more areas of data handling than other textbooks on the subject, including SI units, study design, data presentation, uncertainty, statistical tests, power analysis and nonlinear regression.

* Includes 200 helpful charts and diagrams, making biological trends and outcomes of statistical tests easier to see.

An accessible and authoritative introduction to data handling and analysis for biology students—requiring no previous experience of statistics.

This book serves as a practical and thorough guide to statistics and data analysis, specifically tailored to the biological sciences. Written in straightforward language, it makes data analysis easy to understand for biology students with no previous knowledge of statistics – or any particular enthusiasm for mathematics.

The book shows students how to maintain focus on the biological meaning of their data analysis, rather than getting bogged down in technical mathematics, by using software such as Excel, Real Statistics (a free add-on for Excel) and jamovi (an easy-to-use front end for R). It also introduces simple strategies to make biological data analysis more reliable and to tackle the ‘reproducibility crisis’. These strategies include power analysis to choose suitable sample sizes; estimating the true probability of the null hypothesis from the p-value; and a ‘traffic light’ system to determine statistical significance.

Introductory chapters cover SI units and basic mathematics, study design, descriptive statistics, and presenting results in tables and charts, including a detailed discussion of the different kinds of biological investigation, data types, and uncertainty—essential for choosing the correct charts and tests to present and analyse data. There is also a comprehensive introduction to statistical tests, including effect size, how to determine statistical significance without making false-positive errors, and how to more easily draw out useful conclusions. This is followed by demonstrations of over 20 statistical tests, with worked examples for each, and an additional 70 practice questions with answers. Appendices include greater detail on how to carry out data analysis using calculators, spreadsheets and statistical software.

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