Horace Clifford Levinson
Horace Clifford Levinson (30 June 1895, in Chicago – 1968, in Kennebunk, Maine) was an American mathematician, astronomer, and pioneer of operations research, introducing quantitative methods and sophisticated mathematical models into advertising and merchandising.[1]
Horace C. Levinson's father was the noted Chicago lawyer
In September 1922, Levinson received his Ph.D. in mathematical astronomy and pure mathematics from the University of Chicago with thesis The gravitational field of masses relatively at rest according to Einstein's theory of gravitation.[7] In 1924 he was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in Toronto.[8]
During the 1930s, Horace C. Levinson began to apply scientific analysis for the problems of merchandising. His work for L. Bamberger and Company, involved, among other things, a study of customer buying habits, the response to advertising, and the relation of environment to the type of articles sold. In the 1920s, Levinson had completed a study for a mail-order house on the effect of speeded-up shipment on the customer acceptance or rejection of c.o.d. packages. His success in predicting general human reactions from the collection and analysis of great quantities of data led him later to initiate a study for Bamberger on the effectiveness, in terms of added sales, of keeping department stores open at night.[1]
Levinson taught mathematics at
Selected publications
- with E. B. Zeisler: The Law of Gravitation in Relativity. University of Chicago Press. 1931.[10]
- Levinson, Horace C. (1934). "Notes on stellar photography". Popular Astronomy. 42: 121–131. Bibcode:1934PA.....42..121L.
- Levinson, Horace C. (1953). "Experiences in commercial operations research". Journal of the Operations Research Society of America. 1 (4): 220–239. .
- Chance, luck, and statistics. Dover Publications. 2001. ISBN 9780486419978.[11] reprint of Science of chance: from probability to statistics. New York: Rinehart. 1950.[12] first printed as Your chance to win: the laws of chance and probability. 1939.[13]
References
- ^ ISBN 9780486495699.
- ^ The book of Chicagoans. Vol. 2. 1911. p. 4215.
- ISBN 9781139496346.
- ^ Leonard, Frederick C.; Levinson, Harold C., eds. (1914). Monthly Register of the Society for Practical Astronomy.
- ISBN 9781139496346.
- ^ The American Jewish Year Book 5679, September 7, 1918 to September 24, 1919. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America. 1918. p. 202.
- .
- ^ Levinson, H. C. "The gravitational field of n moving particles in the theory of relativity". In: Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians in Toronto, August 11–16. 1924. Vol. 2. pp. 243–252.
- ^ Levinson, Horace C. (1951). Operations research with special reference to non-military applications: a brochure. National Research Council.
- .
- ^ Aschbacher, Charlie (17 December 2002). "Review of Chance, Luck, and Statistics by Horace C. Levinson". MAA Reviews, Mathematical Association of America.
- Bibcode:1950PA.....58..196M.
- .