2

Are there analysis works that were conducted using the Apophenia library and were published?

This is a C library for statistical analysis. I wanted to know about use cases.

Nownuri
  • 409
  • 2
  • 8
  • 3
    This is the right sort of question to discuss in chat. – whuber Dec 16 '19 at 15:03
  • @whuber People asked this kind of questions here. For instance, https://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/25672/does-julia-have-any-hope-of-sticking-in-the-statistical-community – Nownuri Dec 16 '19 at 15:31
  • another example, https://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/1595/python-as-a-statistics-workbench/2159#2159 – Nownuri Dec 16 '19 at 15:33
  • 1
    You are asking a different question: yours is inquiring about the popularity of software. The others are asking about the software itself. I am concerned that answers will be primarily opinions without objective support. – whuber Dec 16 '19 at 15:35
  • @whuber I asked about 'fact'. I didn't even ask about whether the software is 'suitable' or not. When there are analysis works done using the library and were published, this question is answered. – Nownuri Dec 16 '19 at 15:44
  • 2
    Now I made the question simple and assume it wouldn't look like asking for opinions? – Nownuri Dec 16 '19 at 15:48

1 Answers1

1

Google Scholar returns 15 results. You can decide whether or not they're sufficiently serious.

Sycorax
  • 76,417
  • 20
  • 189
  • 313
  • I edited the title of the question. 14 of the search results are published by the author of the library. But the results do include one real publication case. That paper mentioned one function in the library. Thank you for the information. – Nownuri Dec 16 '19 at 16:06