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Showing posts from September, 2020

Dr. Fauci, or Why Everyone Should Take a Research Methods Course

Time to make this video of Dr. Fauci testifying before Congress Not Awful and Boring Cannon. Because it is beautiful to behold. Here, Dr. Fauci drops truth bombs at a congressional hearing about COVID-19 research. In it, he critiques a hydroxychloroquine research study for not having a control group, having confounds, no randomization, and he talks smack about peer review. And the most important thing? He states that he would change his mind about hydroxychloroquine if compelling data from a well-designed study indicated that he should do so. Because science changes when the evidence changes.  

The Economist: Election predictions, confidence intervals, and measures of central tedency.

The Economist created interactive visualizations for various polling data related to the 2020 U.S. Presidential election.  While illustrating this data, they used different measures of central tendency and different confidence intervals. Like, it is one thing to say that Candidate A is polling at 47% with a margin of error of 3.2%. I think it is much more useful to illustrate what the CI is telling us about the likely true parameter, based on what we have collected from our imperfect sample. The overlap in confidence intervals when polling is essential to understanding polling.  How to use in class: 1) Electoral college predictions, illustrated with median, 60%, and 95% confidence intervals. Also, I like how this illustrates the trade-off between precision and the size of a confidence interval. The 60% CI is more narrow, but you are only 60% confident that it contains the true number of electoral college votes. Meanwhile, the 95% confidence interval is much wide but also more ...

Mode example: What are the most common last names in every country?

This is an engaging example of mode.  Barbara Thompson, writing for NetCredit, shared a report on the most common last names in every country, beautifully summarized via poster . The color coding represents the origins of the last names. I stared at this map for a very long time when I first saw it. NetCredit also shared its data via Google Sheet . How to use in class:  1) Mode example. 2) Ask your students how they think this data was calculated, then send them to the webpage to learn more about how the data was calculated.  3) Go to the full article for this data. They break the data up, continent by continent, to explain how the modal names came to be due to naming tradition/history in each country/region/continent. I'm a big nerd and think that sort of thing is fascinating.