Please suggest a good book for beginner in Quantitative Methods/Techniques. Adding to this, a good book for beginners in R programming language, used in Quantitative Methods. And I've a few questions about this:

? Should I have to learn the other subjects like Probability, Statics, etc. before learning Quantitative Methods

? Is there any relation between Quantitative Methods & Data Mining

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When you say "quantitative methods", do you mean statistics? Please be more clear about what you intend by that phrase. – Shane May 10 '10 at 13:33
@ Shane - Yes I meant statistics. Any suggestions? Thank you. – Rahul May 11 '10 at 8:26
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Thanks. Please revise your question to be more specific. What field are you in, what kind of applications? There are other statistics and R book questions already asked on SO (e.g. stackoverflow.com/questions/2599824/…). – Shane May 11 '10 at 13:27
@ Shane: Dude, before I posted the question here, my search about "Quantitative Methods/Quantitative Techniques/Quantitative Research" in Google lead me to the articles related to Statistics. That's the reason I assumed that my title wouldn't lead to ambiguity. More over I've mentioned about R-Programming too. So it's clearly about statistics related topic. It was my assumption only, no harm no issues. And thanks for the link, it was useful. – Rahul May 12 '10 at 9:06
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Some choices for Quantitative Methods are:

  • Business Statistics Demystified by Kemp and Kemp.
  • Business Statistics by Downing and Clark.
  • Quantitative Methods: for Business, Management and Finance by Louise Swift and Sally Piff
  • Statistics for Management and Economics 8e by Keller.

Regarding R:

  • John Verzani. Using R for Introductory Statistics. Chapman & Hall/CRC
  • Alain F. Zuur, Elena N. Ieno, and Erik Meesters. A Beginner's Guide to R.

Depending on your specific needs, you can look for more appropriate books here

Quantitative methods are research techniques that are used to gather quantitative data. If you mean statistics, of course you'll need it. It's what you'll use to analyze and present the results of these methods. Data mining is not exactly within the scope of quantitative methods, but it is correlated.

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For basic statistics, I like Gujarati's "Basic Econometrics"

To get up and running quickly with R, see this website: http://www.statmethods.net/ Then, move on to the Springer-published "Use R" series. Phil Spector's "Data Manipulation with R" is a good place to start on that front. John Fox' book on "Applied Regression Analysis" is good if slightly outdated, and it should be very easy to find at your local university library.

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