Acknowledgments


Many people make significant and continuing contributions to the development of SAS Institute's software products. The following persons are some of the people who have contributed significant amounts of their time to help us make improvements to SAS/STAT software. This includes research and consulting, testing, or reviewing documentation. We are grateful for the involvement of these members of the statistical community and the many others who are not mentioned here for their feedback, suggestions, and consulting.

Alan Agresti, University of Florida; Douglas Bates, University of Wisconsin; David Binder, Statistics Canada; Suzette Blanchard, Frontier Science Technology Research Foundation; Mary Butler Moore, formerly of University of Florida at Gainesville; Wilbert P. Byrd, Clemson University; Vincent Carey, Harvard University; Sally Carson, RAND; Love Casanova, CSC-FSG; Helene Cavior, Abacus Concepts; George Chao, DuPont Merek Pharmaceutical Company; Daniel M. Chilko, West Virginia University; Jan de Leeuw, University of California, Los Angeles; Dave DeLong, Duke University; Sandra Donaghy, North Carolina State University; David B. Duncan, Johns Hopkins University; Michael Farrell, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Stewart Fossceco, SLF Consulting; Michael Friendly, York University: Rudolf J. Freund, Texas A & M University; Wayne Fuller, Iowa State University; Andrzej Galecki, University of Michigan; A. Ronald Gallant, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Joseph Gardiner, Michigan State University; Charles Gates, Texas A & M University; Thomas M. Gerig, North Carolina State University; Francis Giesbrecht, North Carolina State University; Harvey J. Gold, North Carolina State University; Kenneth Goldberg, Wyeth-Ayerst Research; Donald Guthrie, University of California, Los Angeles; Gerald Hajian, Schering Plough Research Institute; Bob Hamer, UMDNJ-RWJ Medical School; Frank E. Harrell, Jr., University of Virginia; Walter Harvey, Ohio State University; Douglas Hawkins, University of Minnesota; Ronald W. Helms, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Joseph Hilbe, Arizona State University; Gerry Hobbs, West Virginia University; Ronald R. Hocking, Texas A & M University; Julian Horwich; Camp Conference Company; Jason C. Hsu, Ohio State University; David Hurst, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Emilio A. Icaza, Louisiana State University; Joerg Kaufman, Schering AG; William Kennedy, Iowa State University; Gary Koch, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Kenneth L. Koonce, Louisiana State University; Rich La Valley, Strategic Technology Solutions; Russell V. Lenth, University of Iowa; Charles Lin, U.S. Census Burea; Danyu Lin, University of North Carolina; Ardell C. Linnerud, North Carolina State University; Ramon C. Littel, University of Florida; George MacKenzie, University of Oregon; J. Jack McArdle, University of Virginia; Roderick P. McDonald, Macquarie University; Alfio Marazzi, University of Lausanne; J. Philip Miller, Washington University Medical School; George Milliken, Kansas State University; Robert J. Monroe, North Carolina State University; Robert D. Morrison, Oklahoma State University; Keith Muller, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Anupama Narayanen, Sabre Technologies; Ralph G. O'Brien, Cleveland Clinic Foundation; Kenneth Offord, Mayo Clinic; Christopher R. Olinger, ThotWave Technologies; Robert Parks, Washington University; Richard M. Patterson, Auburn University; Virginia Patterson, University of Tennessee; Cliff Pereira, Oregon State University; Hans-Peter Piepho, Universitaet Kassel; Edward Pollak, Iowa State University; C. H. Proctor, North Carolina State University; Dana Quade, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Bill Raynor, Kimberly Clark; Georgia Roberts, Statistics Canada; James Roger, Live Data Process Limited; Peter Rousseeuw, University of Antwerp; Donald Rubin, Harvard University; Joseph L. Schafer, Pennsylvania State University; Robert Schechter, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals; Shayle Searle, Cornell University; Pat Hermes Smith, formerly of Ciba-Geigy; Roger Smith, formerly of USDA; Phil Spector, University of California, Berkeley; Michael Speed, Texas A & M University at College Station; William Stanish, Statistical Insight; Rodney Strand, Orion Enterprises, LLC; Walter Stroup, University of Nebraska; Robert Teichman, ICI Americas Inc.; Terry M. Therneau, Mayo Clinic; Edward Vonesh, Baxter Healthcare Corporation; Grace Wahba, University of Wisconsin at Madison; Glenn Ware, University of Georgia; Peter H. Westfall, Texas Tech University; Edward W. Whitehorne, CI Partners, LLC; William Wigton, USDA; William Wilson, University of North Florida; Philip Wittall, Unilever; Victor Yohai, University of Buenos Aires; Forrest W. Young, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Ruben Zamar, University of British Columbia; and Scott Zeger, Johns Hopkins University.

The final responsibility for the SAS System lies with SAS Institute alone. We hope that you will always let us know your opinions about the SAS System and its documentation. It is through your participation that SAS software is continuously improved.

Please see Feedback at www.sas.com/statistics/ for your comments.




SAS.STAT 9.1 Users Guide (Vol. 2)
SAS/STAT 9.1 Users Guide Volume 2 only
ISBN: B003ZVJDOK
EAN: N/A
Year: 2004
Pages: 92

flylib.com © 2008-2017.
If you may any questions please contact us: flylib@qtcs.net