In this context "extensive" might be use of R in at least maybe 2% or 5% of the published analyses in the area, enough to make waves and stir awareness.
The immediate subtext is the demand of a book publisher for a list of journals to which a new edition of a certain book might be sent for review, and for a list of conferences where it might be given exposure. For myself, in the medium to longer term, I am more interested in other subtexts such as you mention, to which the answer might have relevance. I've wondered what support there'd be for starting a database of bibliographic information on papers where R was used for the analysis. Authors might supply the information, or readers of a paper suggest its addition to the database. Once well populated, this would provide a useful indication of the range of application areas and journals where R is finding use. [Or has someone, somewhere, already started such a database?] Finance and biostatistics are obvious areas that I'd omitted. Other areas drawn to my attention have been telephony and electronic networks, solid state etc manufacturing, computer system performance, oceanography and fisheries research, risk analysis, process engineering and marketing. (I hope my summaries are acceptably accurate). I'm not sure what force these other respondents have given the word "extensive". John Maindonald Mathematical Sciences Institute Australian National University. [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berton Gunter wrote: > Define "extensive." > > I think your answers depend on your definition. I know a bunch of folks in pharmaceutical preclinical R&D who use R for all sorts of stuff (analysis and visualization of tox and efficacy animal studies, dose/response modeling, PK work, IC50 determination, stability data analysis, etc.). Is "bunch" a majority? I strongly doubt that it's near. Is it 5%, 10%, 30% ?? Dunno. Excel is still the Big Boy in most of these arenas I would bet. But I would also bet that there are at least 1 or 2 folks in dozens of companies who use R in for these things. > > Is there a subtext to your query? -- i.e. are you trying to make an argument for something? > > -- Bert > > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ______________________________________________ R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html