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It had to be Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, the man
with an obsession for statistics.It was thought that he must have found
the students' average height and ordered the beds according to that specification.
Wherever Mahalanobis went he roused such
good humoured speculation. At that time not many people in the world,
let alone India, understood statistics and their significance. And Mahalanobis
was considered a crank. But, as Mark Twain said, " A man with a new
idea is a crank, until the idea succeeds".
Mahalanobis's idea did eventually succeed. He was the first Indian statistician
to receive world recognition.In fact, the history of statistics in India
is his personal history. However, it was almost by chance that Mahalanobis
came to be a statistician. He was selecting books from the library of
King's College in London,where he was a mathematics student, when his
tutor ,W.H. Macaulay, happened to come there and suggested that he might
find the latest volume of Biometrica and Biometric Tables interesting.
On reading it Mahalanobis was so thrilled that he brought several volume
of the journal when he came to India for his vacation.That was in 1915
and as World War I was then raging Mahalanobis decided not to return to
London. He had done his B.Sc. and took up a lecturership in physics at
the Presidency College in Calcutta. In his spare time he continued his
studies in statistics. Many thought he was wasting his time, but Rabindranath
Tagore, who had known him from childhood, Brajendra Nath Seal, Professor
of Philosophy at Calcutta University, and Sir Nilratan Sircar, his maternal
uncle, encouraged him.Seal took a personal interest in the statistical
studies of Mahalanobis and predicted that one day statistics would become
a basic scientific tool.
Statistics is a subject which deals with numbers,which may have a relationship
with one another or change in different situations. Using various statistical
methods, a conclusion or conclusions can be inferred from the numbers.
When in 1917 Seal wanted to look into the examination system of Calcutta
University, Mahalanobis waS consulted. An examination system means a lot
of question papers, questions, students, teachers. Mahalanobis handled
these numbers skilfully and forwarded recommendations which brought changes
in the system.
Success in this endeavour prompted him to try his hand at problems in
subjects like anthropology,epidemiology, demography and meteorology, which
again deal with a mass of numbers. For instance,temperature, pressure,
humidity and so on at various sites within a region are first collected
and then processed statistically to predict the weather over the region.
Impressed by his successes, various authorities began to consult Mahalanobis
to tackle their problems. For instance, in 1922 engineers attributed a
disastrous flood that hit North Bengal to arise in the river beds and
advised the government to raise the embankments of rivers to control floods.
Mahalanobis was consulted.Using the figures of rainfall and floods for
the past 50 years, he arrived at a different conclusion. He told the authorities
that abetter drainage system for a smoother flow of rivers was the only
requirement. When his advice was followed, it proved effective. Statistics
had shown its worth. He did a similar study of floods in Orissa. The Hirakud
Hydroelectric Project is based on his statistical studies and so is the
Damodar Valley multipurpose hydroelectric project.
After India gained independence, it had to start several schemes for progress.
Here statistics had a role and Mahalanobis was asked to give his advice.
In 1958 he started his national sample surveys. A sample survey means
assessing a situation by studying apart of it which would represent the
whole. Some of his proposals were included in the second Five Year Plan.
At last Mahalanobis's dream was fulfilled. Not only was statistics being
taught as a special subject in some universities, but it was also helping
in the progress of the country. Meanwhile, he'~had founded the Indian
Statistical Research Institute in Calcutta. The institute,which today
has branches all over the country and conducts national sample recognition
within a short time.
Mahalanobis's contributions to statistics are of great importance.A few
have already been included in textbooks. The tools he in "Mahalanobis
distance" a sis" have wide application was elected Fellow of
the died in 1972 at the age 79.
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