In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Rich Ulrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 21 Nov 2001 10:24:54 -0600, Bill Jefferys
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dennis Roberts) wrote:
#on this near holiday ... at least in the usa ... i wonder if you might
This is not a big holiday in Sweden, but I'll be brief anyway, throwing
in some personal thoughts:
Understanding that the notion of relationship between (two) variables
have different aspects. Like correlation measures, statistical effect,
explanatory power, consistency, mechanism ... And
Alan McLean wrote:
Happy holiday, Dennis. I have two answers to this question - pick one!
First, the recognition that all of statistics, but particularly
inference, is about providing, and assessing the strength of, evidence -
in circumstances where some measurement(s) can sensibly be
on this near holiday ... at least in the usa ... i wonder if you might
consider for a moment:
what is the SINGLE most valuable concept/procedure/skill (just one!) ...
that you would think is most important when it comes to passing along to
students studying inferential statistics
what i am
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dennis Roberts) wrote:
#on this near holiday ... at least in the usa ... i wonder if you might
#consider for a moment:
#
#what is the SINGLE most valuable concept/procedure/skill (just one!) ...
#that you would think is most important when it
Dennis Roberts wrote:
on this near holiday ... at least in the usa ... i wonder if you might
consider for a moment:
what is the SINGLE most valuable concept/procedure/skill (just one!) ...
that you would think is most important when it comes to passing along to
students studying
On Wed, 21 Nov 2001 10:24:54 -0600, Bill Jefferys
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dennis Roberts) wrote:
#on this near holiday ... at least in the usa ... i wonder if you might
#consider for a moment:
#
#what is the SINGLE most valuable
Happy holiday, Dennis. I have two answers to this question - pick one!
First, the recognition that all of statistics, but particularly
inference, is about providing, and assessing the strength of, evidence -
in circumstances where some measurement(s) can sensibly be defined, and
these