Find anything…
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Fresh off the assembly belt…
- Sailing the sea of uncertainty
- Brain processes: A tale of two outcomes
- False-positive brain: Do you really have to correct for multiple comparisons in an analysis of variance?
- Scaling the brain: Is it dishonest to truncate your y-axis?
- Deceived brain – Can twitter followers differentiate real and false memories
Random tweets
Load More...You have a symposium talk or poster at #PuG2022? You are also using #OpenScience methods? Then you should apply for this prize!
(Really, you should apply. Don't think you aren't "open" enough!)Have you submitted a poster or symposium talk to #PuG2022 and use/discuss #OpenScience practices? Apply for this prize! ⬇️🔥 https://twitter.com/igor_dgps/status/1519915051930558466
Category Archives: Experiment
Brain processes: A tale of two outcomes
Recently, I started thinking about the chances of finding that one process is involved in two separate functions. If it affects these functions completely independently and they also do not affect each other, it seems intuitive that finding both functions … Continue reading
Posted in Experiment, Statistics
Tagged methods, multiple outcomes, power, statistics, stats
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Deceived brain – Can twitter followers differentiate real and false memories
Currently, I am curating the German version of the Real Scientist twitter account and this is a lot of fun. At Real Scientist real scientists get to tweet about their work and benefit from the following of the account, which … Continue reading
Posted in Experiment, Memory
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