Synopses & Reviews
Comprehensive coverage, state-of-the-art methods
This groundbreaking volume describes the statistical theory that underlies the detection and quantification of environmental pollution both in the laboratory and in the field. It presents the foundation of relating measured concentrations to true concentrations and the development of intervals of uncertainty for true concentrations, and it presents a comprehensive review of the problem of estimating thresholds at which detection and quantification decisions can be made reliably.
The authors demonstrate the use of analytical measurements in making environmental impact decisions and in comparing environmental data to regulatory standards and naturally occurring background concentrations. Taking the next step in a major evolution in the way environmental impact decisions are made, Statistical Methods for Detection and Quantification of Environmental Contamination:
- Presents statistical methods that allow the earliest possible detection and quantification of contaminants
- Describes procedures applicable to all environmental constituents
- Covers numerous state-of-the-art approaches
- Includes case studies demonstrating practical applications of these approaches
An indispensable handbook for scientists and engineers involved in environmental monitoring programs, this book is also an important resource for public health officials, waste facility managers, regulators, statisticians, and analytical chemists.
Amstat News asked three review editors to rate their top five favorite books in the September 2003 issue. Statistical Methods for Detection and Quantification of Environmental Contamination was among those chosen.
Review
"an indispensable book" (Int Jnl of Environmental Analytical Chemistry, No.82 2001)
Synopsis
Kontaminationen so fr h wie m glich erkennen und damit so fr h wie m glich beseitigen: Statistische Methoden, die diesem Ziel dienen, werden hier vorgestellt. Die besprochenen Strategien zum Nachweis und zur Quantifizierung von Schadstoffen lassen sich auf alle Umweltkompartimente anwenden. Praktische Details werden anhand von Fallstudien anschaulich erl utert.
Synopsis
An indispensable handbook for scientists and engineers involved in environmental monitoring programs, this book is also an important resource for public health officials, waste facility managers, regulators, statisticians, and analytical chemists.
Synopsis
Amstat News asked three review editors to rate their top five favorite books in the September 2003 issue.
Statistical Methods for Detection and Quantification of Environmental Contamination was among those chosen.
This groundbreaking volume describes the statistical theory that underlies the detection and quantification of environmental pollution both in the laboratory and in the field. It presents the foundation of relating measured concentrations to true concentrations and the development of intervals of uncertainty for true concentrations, and it presents a comprehensive review of the problem of estimating thresholds at which detection and quantification decisions can be made reliably.
The authors demonstrate the use of analytical measurements in making environmental impact decisions and in comparing environmental data to regulatory standards and naturally occurring background concentrations. Taking the next step in a major evolution in the way environmental impact decisions are made, Statistical Methods for Detection and Quantification of Environmental Contamination:
- Presents statistical methods that allow the earliest possible detection and quantification of contaminants
- Describes procedures applicable to all environmental constituents
- Covers numerous state-of-the-art approaches
- Includes case studies demonstrating practical applications of these approaches
An indispensable handbook for scientists and engineers involved in environmental monitoring programs, this book is also an important resource for public health officials, waste facility managers, regulators, statisticians, and analytical chemists.
About the Author
ROBERT D. GIBBONS, PhD, is Professor of Biostatistics and Director of the Center for Health Statistics at the University of Illinois at Chicago
DAVID E. COLEMAN, MS, is Senior Technical Specialist-Statistics at the Alcoa Technical Center in Alcoa Center, Pennsylvania.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION IN THE LABORATORY.
Conceptual Foundations.
Statistical Foundations and Review.
Calibration-Based Regression Models.
Single-Concentration-Based Detection Limit Methods.
Single-Concentration-Based Quantification Limit Methods.
Calibration-Based Detection Limit Methods.
Calibration-Based Quantification Limit Methods.
Significant Digits.
Experimental Design of Detection and Quantification Limit Studies and Related Studies.
Between-Laboratory Detection and Quantification Limit Estimators.
DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION IN THE FIELD.
Comparison of a Single Measurement to a Regulatory Standard.
Censored Data.
Testing Distributional Assumptions.
Testing for Outliers.
Detecting Trend.
Detection Monitoring.
Assessment and Corrective Action Monitoring: Overview.
Assessment and Corrective Action Monitoring: Comparison to a Standard.
Assessment and Corrective Action Monitoring: Comparison to Background.
Assessment and Corrective Action Monitoring: Case Studies.
Review of Available Computer Software.
Summary.
Appendix: Land's Tables.
Glossary of Measurement Terminology.
Mathematical Symbols.
Web References.
Annotated Bibliography.
Index.