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Chris Tosh | The piranha problem in statistics

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Chris Tosh | The piranha problem in statistics The piranha problem (too many large, independent effect sizes influence the same outcome) has received some attention on Andrew Gelman’s blog. But now it’s a paper! Chris Tosh (Memorial Sloan Kettering) talks about multiple views of the piranha problem and detecting the implausible scientific claims that are published. The butterfly effect makes an appearance. If you enjoyed the science-vs-pseudoscience topics, you’ll enjoy this one. #statistics #datascience #science 0:00 - Coming up in the episode 2:35 - What is the Piranha Problem? 19:54 - Confusing effect sizes 23:11 - The "words & walking speed" study 26:22 - Declaration of independent variables 30:58 - Piranha theorems for correlations 37:07 - Piranha theorems for linear regression 40:37 - Piranha Theorems for mutual information 44:13 - Bounds on the independence of the covariates 46:12 - Applying the piranha theorem to real data 50:12 - Applying the piranha theorem across studies 54:05 - A Bayesian detour 1:00:12 - The butterfly effect & chaos 1:04:26 - Applying the piranha theorem to cancer research

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