Title of article
Evolution of Athletic Records: Statistical Effects versus Real Improvements
Author/Authors
Daniel Gembris، نويسنده , , John G. Taylor & Dieter Suter، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
17
From page
529
To page
545
Abstract
Athletic records represent the best results in a given discipline, thus improving
monotonically with time. As has already been shown, this should not be taken as an indication
that the athletes’ capabilities keep improving. In other words, a new record is not noteworthy just
because it is a new record, instead it is necessary to assess by how much the record has improved. In
this paper we derive formulae that can be used to show that athletic records continue to improve with
time, even if athletic performance remains constant. We are considering two specific examples, the
German championships and the world records in several athletic disciplines. The analysis shows that,
for the latter, true improvements occur in 20–50% of the disciplines. The analysis is supplemented
by an application of our record estimation approach to the prediction of the maximum body length
of humans for a specified size of a population respectively population group from a representative
sample.
Keywords
records , Athletics , estimation of maxima and minima
Journal title
JOURNAL OF APPLIED STATISTICS
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
JOURNAL OF APPLIED STATISTICS
Record number
712127
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