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In which I compare t curves with Brazilian butt lifts.

OK. This wasn't my original idea, but I love it so much that I'm blogging about it. The original idea came from Dr. Andrea Sell, who, in turn, got this idea from one of her brilliant student, Johanna Perez.  How t  distributions are like Brazilian Butt Lifts: A treatise.  First, familiarize yourself with the Brazilian Butt Lift: The fat doesn't leave. As illustrated below, the fat just moves...into the tail.  https://ariamedtour.com/blogs/why-is-bbl-popular/ Is this not what William Gosset did when he created the t -curve? Instead of moving around fat, he moved around probability under the normal curve. He moved that probability into the tails . Both Igo Pitanguy (inventor of the Brazilian Butt Lift) and William Gosset (inventor of the t-test) moved things around as to...CREATE A THICKER (thiccer?) TAIL. THIS IS SUCH A PERFECT METAPHOR. See:

Update: Using baby name popularity to illustrate unimodal and bimodal data

I love internet-based teaching ideas. They are free and current. At least they were current when I first posted them, but some of my posts are ten years old.  Such is the case for my old post about the Baby Name Voyage r and how to use it to illustrate unimodal, and bimodal distributions. Instead, please go to NameGrapher to show your students how flash-in-the-plan trendy baby names, like my own, have an unimodal distribution: As opposed to bimodal distributions, which flag a name as a more classical name that enjoyed a resurgence, like Emma: When I use this in class, I frame it between names that were trendy once and names that were trendy one hundred years ago and are again trendy. As a mom to grade-school-aged kids, I have certainly noticed this as a trend in kid names. So many Lilies and Noras!  I also make sure my students understand that this information is gathered via Social Security Administration applications from the federal government, to back up another clai...

A recording of a statsy talk I gave at Murray State University.

 Hey. Most of you have never met me and only read my words on this blog, so I thought it would be fun to share a recording of a talk I gave at Murray State University in October of this year .  Not only do you get to see/hear me in action, I think this talk does a great job of summing up my approach to statistics and what I want my students to get out of my class. If you agree with my approach, may I gently suggest that you sign yourself up to get updates on  my forthcoming WW Norton Psychological Statistics textbook: https://seagull.wwnorton.com/l/710463/2023-10-26/2tp3nt