Fleiss wrote two textbooks that are considered classics in biostatistics. His first book,
Statistical Methods for Rates and Proportions (1973), concerned the issue of using
proportions to summarize counts and frequencies. According to professors
Patrick E. Shrout and
Melissa D. Begg, the book "attracted a wide readership with its many engaging examples and a thorough, but accessible discussion of esoteric statistical principles". It continues to be particularly influential in the fields of psychiatry and epidemiology. Fleiss's second book,
Design and Analysis of Clinical Experiments (1986), was equally influential among a different group of medical researchers. It reviewed the principles and challenges concerning the planning and interpretation of studies involving people. Human subjects present experimenters with challenges not seen in other scientific experiments: they may fail to take the treatment, they may drop out of a study, and they may lie or misrepresent the outcome. In his book, Fleiss addressed these problems. Fleiss also contributed chapters to more than two dozen books and authored or co-authored more than 200 statistical and scientific papers concerning the application of statistics in fields ranging from psychiatry and cardiology to dentistry. ==Recognition and awards==