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- 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
- Continuity of self: Was the world put into place five minutes ago?
Random tweets
Load More...I highly encourage reading this by @annemscheel! I find it supports delaying our large RR and to first fully establish that we will be measuring meaningful data! Confirmatory research done right is too expensive to rely on a researchers best guesses. https://t.co/xq68ThOWna
Job Opportunity! Please RT and share!
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We are seeking to hire up to 8 Assistant Professors in the Department of Psychology, including several appointments in Developmental Science.
Come join us in beautiful Durham! @Durham_Uni
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Tag Archives: stats
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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