Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C: Applied Statistics

Journal Title

  • Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C: Applied Statistics

ISSN

  • E 1467-9876 | P 0035-9254 | 1467-9876 | 0035-9254

Publisher

  • Blackwell Publishing Inc.
  • Wiley-Blackwell

Listed on(Coverage)

JCR1997-2019
SJR1999-2019
CiteScore2011-2019
SCI2010-2019
SCIE2010-2021
CC2016-2021
SCOPUS2017-2020

Active

  • Active

    based on the information

    • SCOPUS:2020-10

Country

  • USA

Aime & Scopes

  • The Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series C (Applied Statistics), promotes papers that are focused on statistical methods for real life problems. Applications should be central to papers, rather than illustrative, to motivate the work and to justify any methodological developments. All papers should feature an adequate description of a substantial application and a justification for any new theory. Case-studies may be particularly appropriate and should include some contextual details, though there should also be a novel statistical contribution, for instance by adapting or developing methodology, or by demonstrating the proper application of new or existing statistical methods to solve challenging applied problems. Papers describing interdisciplinary work are especially welcome, as are those that give interesting novel applications of existing methodology or provide new insights into the practical application of methods, and papers explaining innovative analysis of generic applied problems but not necessarily focused on a particular application also have a place in Series C. Short communications may also be appropriate. Methodological papers that are not motivated by a genuine application are not acceptable; nor are papers that include only brief numerical illustrations or that mainly describe simulation studies of properties of statistical techniques. However, papers describing developments in statistical computing are encouraged, provided that they are driven by practical examples. Extended algebraic treatment should be avoided.

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