From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American mathematician
Bertha Irene Hart was an American
mathematician . She had a
Master of Arts degree from
Cornell University , and was at one point an associate professor of mathematics for
Western Maryland College .
[1]
Affiliations
In 1946 she was elected to “ordinary membership” of the
American Mathematical Society .
[2]
She was elected as a Fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1957. At that time she was also affiliated with the
Ballistic Research Laboratory .
[3]
Notable publications
“Significance Levels for the Ratio of the Mean Square Successive Difference to the Variance”, B. I. Hart,
The Annals of Mathematical Statistics , Vol. 13, No. 4 (Dec., 1942), pp. 445–447
[4]
“Tabulation of the Probabilities for the Ratio of the Mean Square Successive Difference to the Variance”, B. I. Hart,
John von Neumann ,
The Annals of Mathematical Statistics , Vol. 13, No. 2 (Jun., 1942), pp. 207–214
[5]
The Mean Square Successive Difference,
J. von Neumann , R. H. Kent, H. R. Bellinson, B. I. Hart,
The Annals of Mathematical Statistics , Vol. 12, No. 2 (Jun., 1941), pp. 153–162
[6]
References
^
"WESTERN MARYLAND COLLEGE BULLETIN, VOLUME VIII, NUMBER 1" (PDF) . March 1928. p. 9.
^ T. R. Hollcroft (1946).
"THE APRIL MEETING IN NEW YORK, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 52 [Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, number 52]" (PDF) . pp. 581–582.
^
"Historic Fellows; American Association for the Advancement of Science" . April 19, 2022. Archived from
the original on 19 April 2022.
^ Hart, B. I. (1942).
"Significance Levels for the Ratio of the Mean Square Successive Difference to the Variance" . The Annals of Mathematical Statistics . 13 (4): 445–447 – via JSTOR.
^ Hart, B. I.; von Neumann, John (1942).
"Tabulation of the Probabilities for the Ratio of the Mean Square Successive Difference to the Variance" . The Annals of Mathematical Statistics . 13 (2): 207–214 – via JSTOR.
^ von Neumann, J.; Kent, R. H.; Bellinson, H. R.; Hart, B. I. (1941).
"The Mean Square Successive Difference" . The Annals of Mathematical Statistics . 12 (2): 153–162 – via JSTOR.