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51.Pictures of Numbers (www.numberpix.com)
Pictures of Numbers is a book-project-in-progress, consisting of practical tips and techniques for busy researchers on improving their data presentation, and is updated in intermittent bursts of regularity by Mike Dickison.
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52.let’s get rid of the pseudo-r2 « orgtheory.net (orgtheory.wordpress.com)
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53.Fishing in the Bay » False Convictions (blogs.mbs.edu)
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54.Language Log » Speech rate and per-syllable information across languages (languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu)
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55.Data Visualization: Modern Approaches | Smashing Magazine (www.smashingmagazine.com)
Amazing collection of data visualizations.
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56.Using R for statistical analyses - Introduction (www.gardenersown.co.uk)
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57.Radio revenue data from Charlotte (heavylifting.blogspot.com)
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58.Hockey Analytics - Research (www.hockeyanalytics.com)
Devoted to the Scientific Exploration of the Game of Hockey
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59.
Georgia Tech statisticians use Markov chains for a combined 83 percent accuracy over the past nine tournaments.
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60.
21 minute video. Oxford mathematician Peter Donnelly explores the common mistakes we make in interpreting statistics, and the devastating impact these errors can have on the outcome of criminal trials. Statistical uncertainty and randomness, he says, confound many of our assumptions about the world. He shares the case of a British woman wrongly convicted of murdering her two infants -- a verdict reached, in part, by the misuse of statistics.
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61.Junk Charts: Hanging tough (junkcharts.typepad.com)
A tree-structured graph shows disparities in literacy.
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62.Does winning an Oscar make you live longer? (blogs.mbs.edu)
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63.Box Plot | Information & Visualization (informationandvisualization.de)
The boxplot meets CSS/Javascript.
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64.A Case Against Evidence Based Medicine? (www.iq.harvard.edu)
Funny how such a lampoon can trigger a flame war on the BMJ website.
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65.U.S. voting trends by class (www.stat.columbia.edu)
Professionals (doctors, lawyers, and so forth) and routine white collar workers (clerks, etc.) used to support the Republicans more than the national average, but over the past half-century they have gradually moved through the center and now strongly support the Democrats.
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66.Good Math, Bad Math : Schools of thought in Probability Theory (scienceblogs.com)
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67.Random Variables | Good Math, Bad Math (scienceblogs.com)