The Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training have launched a new glossary. You can find a paywalled paper introducing the glossary here. I did not find the glossary easy to skim through so I decided to download the glossary from GitHub and make my own table with the 261 entries. Here it is: Title […]
Category: blog
Frasier #2
In 2020, I wrote a post about my IMDb ratings of all episodes of Frasier. Since then, my great friend Knud rewatched the show and also rated all episodes on IMDb. When we both watched Seinfeld back in 2017, I compared our ratings and identified some trends and similarities in our ratings. For that reason, […]
How effective is nudging? #2
In a new study, Mertens et al. (2022) examine the effectiveness of nudging. Specifically, they conduct a meta-analysis of 455 effect sizes from 214 publications. Here is the key finding presented in the abstract: “Our results show that choice architecture interventions overall promote behavior change with a small to medium effect size of Cohen’s d […]
25 interesting facts #17
401. The highest emitting 100 urban areas account for 18% of the global carbon footprint (Moran et al. 2018) 402. In the United States, indigenous land density has been reduced by nearly 99% (Farrell et al. 2022) 403. Researchers funded by the alcohol industry are more likely to report alcohol protective effects (Golder and McCambridge […]
Datavisualisering: Se & Hør-pigen
Før du læser videre: Den eneste model du kommer til at se i dette indlæg, er en multipel lineær regressionsmodel. Forleden fandt jeg en oversigt med Se & Hør-pigen fra 1998 til 2022 (det hedder mærkværdigt nok ikke Se & Hør-kvinden til trods for at det hedder Se & Hør-manden). Oversigten er tilgængelig som en […]