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Who's Bigger?

Who's Bigger?

Who's Bigger?

Where Historical Figures Really Rank
Steven Skiena, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Charles B. Ward, Google, Inc., Mountain View, California
October 2013
Hardback
9781107041370
AUD$51.95
inc GST
Hardback
USD
eBook

    Is Hitler bigger than Napoleon? Washington bigger than Lincoln? Picasso bigger than Einstein? Quantitative analysts are rapidly finding homes in social and cultural domains, from finance to politics. What about history? In this fascinating book, Steve Skiena and Charles Ward bring quantitative analysis to bear on ranking and comparing historical reputations. They evaluate each person by aggregating the traces of millions of opinions, just as Google ranks webpages. The book includes a technical discussion for readers interested in the details of the methods, but no mathematical or computational background is necessary to understand the rankings or conclusions. Along the way, the authors present the rankings of more than one thousand of history's most significant people in science, politics, entertainment, and all areas of human endeavor. Anyone interested in history or biography can see where their favorite figures place in the grand scheme of things.

    • Lists of rankings for more than 1,000 of history's most significant figures
    • Presents a unique data-driven approach to looking at history
    • Explains why certain historical figures persist in the public consciousness, while others are forgotten

    Reviews & endorsements

    'This is all fun: reputational face-offs are great entertainment. And, shrewdly, Skiena and Ward have an app. More seriously, historians will put quantitative analysis to good use - and their model may help historiographers grapple with Wikipedia.' New Scientist

    'I confess to simply liking the book. I still do not care about the great order of things; nonetheless, I very much appreciate a huge amount of fascinating detail that the book makes available at one's fingertips, and the orderly manner in which it does that.' Alex Bogomolny, MAA Reviews

    '… the authors' enthusiasm and sense of play are infectious.' Cass Sunstein, The New Republic

    See more reviews

    Product details

    No date available
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781107454699
    0 pages
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    101 b/w illus. 2 maps 176 tables
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Quantitative History:
    • 1. History's most significant people
    • 2. Ranking historical figures
    • 3. Who belongs in Bonnie's textbook?
    • 4. Reading through the past
    • 5. Great Americans and the process of canonization
    • 6. The baseball hall of fame
    • 7. Historical time scales
    • Part II. Historical Rankings:
    • 8. American political figures
    • 9. Modern world leaders
    • 10. Science and technology
    • 11. Religion and philosophy
    • 12. Sports
    • 13. The arts
    • 14. The performing arts
    • 15. Devils and angels
    • Part III. Appendices: A. Ranking methodology
    • B. Resources
    • C. Biographical dictionary.
      Authors
    • Steven Skiena , State University of New York, Stony Brook

      Steven S. Skiena is Distinguished Teaching Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University. He is the author of four well-regarded books: The Algorithm Design Manual (2008), Calculated Bets: Computers, Gambling, and Mathematical Modeling to Win (2001), Programming Challenges (with Miguel Revilla, 2003) and Computational Discrete Mathematics (with Sriram Pemmaraju, 2003). Skiena heads the Lydia news/blog analysis project at Stony Brook, using large-scale text analysis to chart the frequency, sentiment and relationships among millions of people, places, and things. This technology forms the foundation of General Sentiment (http://www.generalsentiment.com), where he serves as co-founder and Chief Scientist. Lydia news analysis has been applied to several social science research projects, including financial forecasting and presidential election analysis. The rankings underlying Who's Bigger? derive from this analysis.

    • Charles B. Ward , Google, Inc., Mountain View, California

      Charles B. Ward currently works as an engineer on the search engine team at Google. He is the author of more than a dozen scholarly papers, including research in text analysis, computational social science, computational biology, and graph theory. Ward worked as a lead developer with the Lydia news analysis project during his four years of postdoctoral studies at Stony Brook University. He is also an authority on historical strategy games. More information is available at https://sites.google.com/site/charlesbward/.