Aimable Robert Jonckheere

Aimable Robert Jonckheere
Born (1920-05-25)25 May 1920
Hem, France
Died 24 September 2005(2005-09-24) (aged 85)
London
Known for Jonckheere's trend test
Academic background
Alma mater University College London
Academic work
Discipline Psychology, Statistics

Aimable Robert Jonckheere, commonly known by friends and colleagues as "Jonck", was a psychologist and statistician at University College London (UCL).[1] He is probably best known for his work in nonparametric statistics, where he has a test named after him: Jonckheere's trend test.[2]

Early life

Observatory at Hem (photo from around 1909) where Jonckheere was born

Jonckheere was born in Hem, near Lille in France, in a house attached to an observatory.[1] His father was Robert Jonckhèere, a French astronomer known for discovering 3350 double stars. Jonckheere took a first class degree in psychology with statistics in 1949 and a PhD in 1956, both from UCL.[1]

Work

Jonckheere is probably best known for his work in nonparametric statistics, approaches which make fewer assumptions about the theoretical distribution of the data than parametric statistics. In this field he developed what is now known as Jonckheere's trend test, a method which is implemented in SPSS, a statistical package favoured by social scientists, and R, widely used by statisticians.[3] He published little; however, he influenced many people's ideas and work, with traces of conversations and advice throughout UCL and beyond.

Jonckheere visited and left his mark at the International Centre for Genetic Epistemology in Geneva, where Jean Piaget forbade him from leaving unless he could find an equally able replacement.[4] Jonckheere coauthored a book with Piaget and Benoit Mandelbrot on mental development.[5] Other people Jonck worked with or was associated with include J. B. S. Haldane, A. J. Ayer, Cyril Burt, Hans Eysenck, and Ernst Gombrich.[6]

R. J. Audley's (1956) University of London PhD thesis acknowledgment illustrates the kind of support which was common from Jonckheere; Audley writes that "much of the thesis is the result of long periods of almost daily argument with him."[7] The fruits of this collaboration led to the Audley-Jonckheere stochastic model of learning. This also illustrates one of Jonckheere's main loves, applying mathematical analysis to psychological science. But Jonckheere's interests were much broader than mathematics. For example, although he worked at (what is now) the UCL Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, he also gave lectures at the Slade School of Fine Art there, one of the top art schools in the UK.[1] He earned a reputation for devouring books and being able to talk with assurance on a broad range of topics.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Gregory, Richard L. (21 October 2005). "AR Jonckheere: Intellectual fascinated by the philosophy of perception". Guardian. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  2. Jonckheere, A. R. (1954). "A distribution-free k-sample test against ordered alternatives". Biometrika. 41: 133–145. doi:10.2307/2333011.
  3. See the DescTools package; Andri Signorell, et al. (2016). DescTools: Tools for descriptive statistics. R package version 0.99.16.
  4. Shallice, Tim (12 October 2005). "AR Jonckheere:Psychologist/statistician for whom ideas were all". Independent. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  5. Jonckeere, A.; Mandelbrot, B.; Piaget, J. 1958.La lecture de l'expérience. Paris, Presses universitaires de France. (Etudes d'épistémologie génétique, V.)
  6. 1 2 Johnson, Paul (10 December 2005). "And another thing". The Spectator. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  7. Audley, Robert J. (1956). Stochastic processes and the description of learning behaviour in choice situations (Ph.D.). University of London.

External links

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