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Temporada 2021
2021x1
MINI-LESSON 1: Breaking down intuitively the concept of standard deviation. Why pple don't get it.
Episode overview
Before we talk about correlation, let's discuss standard deviation, its analog in dimension 1. People don't get while using it as a metric for deviation!
Before we talk about correlation, let's discuss standard deviation, its analog in dimension 1. People don't get while using it as a metric for deviation!
2021x2
MINI-LESSON 2: Fat Tails, a Very, Very Introductory Presentation.
Episode overview
What are Fat Tails? This is very introductory.
What are Fat Tails? This is very introductory.
2021x3
MINI-LESSON 3: The Law of Large Numbers. A very intuitive introduction.
Episode overview
Everything in empirical science is based on the law of large numbers. Remember that it fails under fat tails.
Everything in empirical science is based on the law of large numbers. Remember that it fails under fat tails.
2021x4
MINI-LESSON 4: CLT, The Central Limit Theorem, a nontechnical presentation.
Episode overview
The CLT allows anyone (including ignorant economists and psychologists) to do statistics by using prepackaged recipes coming from the Gaussian. What are the foundations? How does it work? Where does it not work?
The CLT allows anyone (including ignorant economists and psychologists) to do statistics by using prepackaged recipes coming from the Gaussian. What are the foundations? How does it work? Where does it not work?
2021x5
MINI-LESSON 5: Correlation, the intuition. Doesn't mean what people usually think it means.
Episode overview
A maximally intuitive presentation on what correlation is not, with maximally simplified concepts.
A maximally intuitive presentation on what correlation is not, with maximally simplified concepts.
A maximally simplified presentation of how metrics are random variables, and how they can be gamed. Uncorrelated variables will produce a correlation in samples.
A maximally simplified presentation of how metrics are random variables, and how they can be gamed. Uncorrelated variables will produce a correlation in samples.
2021x7
MINI LESSON 7: P-Values and P-Value Hacking: a simplified lecture.
Episode overview
We saw that 1) many metrics are stochastic, 2) what is stochastic can be hacked. This is the simplification of my work showing that "p-values are not p-values", i.e. highly sample
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We saw that 1) many metrics are stochastic, 2) what is stochastic can be hacked. This is the simplification of my work showing that "p-values are not p-values", i.e. highly sample dependent, with a skewed distribution. For instance for a "true" P value of .11, 53% of observations will show less than .05. This allows for hacking: in a few trials a researcher can get a fake p-value of .01.
Power laws, extremely simplified.
Power laws, extremely simplified.
Q&A on MIN-LESSON 8 (Power Laws). Why violence did not drop (the Pinker Problem) -- Pandemics --What an infinite mean means -- What causes power laws.
Q&A on MIN-LESSON 8 (Power Laws). Why violence did not drop (the Pinker Problem) -- Pandemics --What an infinite mean means -- What causes power laws.
2021x10
MINI-LESSON 9: Evidence Based Science & Mistakes in Particularizing the General (Simplified)
Episode overview
1) The law of large numbers (properties of aggregates) works in one direction. Why you can generalize from particulars, never particularize from generals.
2) The difference betweern
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1) The law of large numbers (properties of aggregates) works in one direction. Why you can generalize from particulars, never particularize from generals.
2) The difference betweern clinical, statistical, and risk management approached. Why they don't scale.
3) Never compare Mediocristan to Extremistan (Covid to car accidents).
2021x11
MIN-LESSON 9b 2 min technical comments for Mini Lesson 9.
Episode overview
Why the statistical properties of a group will NOT particularize to any individual member of the group. Explained in 2 minutes. The example uses central limit.
Why the statistical properties of a group will NOT particularize to any individual member of the group. Explained in 2 minutes. The example uses central limit.
2021x12
MINI LESSON 9c- Detecting Quackery in a Psychology Paper
Episode overview
A simple case study where model error shows the claims in a paper published in a "prestigious" psychology journal to be false. Why worry about low R^2.
A simple case study where model error shows the claims in a paper published in a "prestigious" psychology journal to be false. Why worry about low R^2.
2021x13
MINI LESSON 10a Simpson's Paradox & Its Exploitation by Covid Sociopaths in 3 ½ min.
Episode overview
In every age bracket, the vaccinated live longer than the unvaccinated (using all cause mortality). However as a group the unvaccinated appear to have a longer life expectancy. This is
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In every age bracket, the vaccinated live longer than the unvaccinated (using all cause mortality). However as a group the unvaccinated appear to have a longer life expectancy. This is because the vaccinated tend to be older (hence more likely to die). I explain Simpson's Paradox in general.
Explaining path dependence and maximum drawdown.
Explaining path dependence and maximum drawdown.
2021x15
Final da Temporada
MINI LECTURE 11b - Drawdowns and Logs
Episode overview
Quick presentation of drawdowns and the necessity to use logarithms for returns.
Quick presentation of drawdowns and the necessity to use logarithms for returns.
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