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Yosef Hochberg

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Yosef Hochberg
יוסף הוכברג
Born1945 (1945)
DiedDecember 3, 2013(2013-12-03) (aged 67–68)
Alma materUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (PhD)
Known forFalse discovery rate
Benjamini–Hochberg procedure
Hochberg's step-up procedure
Scientific career
FieldsStatistics
InstitutionsTel Aviv University
ThesisSome approximate pairwise-efficient multiple-comparison procedures in general unbalanced designs (1974)
Doctoral advisorPranab K. Sen

Yosef Hochberg (Hebrew: יוסף הוכברג; 1945 – December 3, 2013)[1] was an Israeli statistician and professor of statistics at Tel Aviv University. He is best known for the development (with Yoav Benjamini) of the false discovery rate (FDR) criterion and the Benjamini–Hochberg (BH) procedure for controlling the FDR rate, as well as Hochberg's step-up procedure for controlling the family-wise error rate.

Hochberg earned his PhD at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1974.[2][3] Pranab K. Sen was his doctoral advisor.

While on leave from Tel Aviv University, he visited the Statistics and Operations Research Department at New York University.[4]

He became a fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1994.[5] He was the seventh president of the Israeli Statistical Association.[3]

He died on December 3, 2013.[3]

Publications

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Articles

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  • Benjamini, Yoav; Hochberg, Yosef (1995). "Controlling the False Discovery Rate: A Practical and Powerful Approach to Multiple Testing". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B (Methodological). 57 (1): 289–300. ISSN 0035-9246.
  • Hochberg, Yosef (1 December 1988). "A sharper Bonferroni procedure for multiple tests of significance". Biometrika. 75 (4): 800–802. doi:10.1093/biomet/75.4.800. ISSN 0006-3444.

Books

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  • Multiple Comparison Procedures (1987)

References

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  1. ^ "In Memoriam". en-exact-sciences.tau.ac.il. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  2. ^ Hochberg, Yosef. "An Extension of the T-Method to General Unbalanced Models of Fixed Effects". North Carolina State University. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  3. ^ a b c "BiosRhythms" (PDF). No. 25. Gillins School of Global Public Health. December 2013. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  4. ^ Conforti, Michele; Hochberg, Yosef (1 January 1987). "Sequentially rejective pairwise testing procedures". Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference. 17: 193–208. doi:10.1016/0378-3758(87)90112-1. ISSN 0378-3758.
  5. ^ "ASA Fellows". American Statistical Association. Retrieved 17 February 2025.