This is a brief follow-up post to my previous post with advice on how you can improve your figures. Can it be worse than showing variable names instead of actual labels on your figures? Yes. You can have no labels at all. Take a look at this article. It’s great and includes references to a […]
Category: statistics
Resources with research writing advice
I was going through a few resources with some good advice on writing research papers. Might be of interest to some of you: – How to write a great research paper (Simon Peyton Jones from Microsoft gives seven suggestions for how to improve your research papers) – Ten simple rules for structuring papers (Table 1 […]
Ten great R functions
Here are ten R functions that have saved me a lot of time over the years. 1. forcats::fct_reorder() The forcats package has a lot of great functions. The one I use the most is the fct_reorder() function. I have also seen David Robinson using it a lot in his YouTube videos (I recommend his videos […]
Potpourri: Statistics #71
819. SDS 375/395 Data Visualization in R 820. Demystifying the coalesce function 821. Data Viz Bookmarks 822. Data Science: A First Introduction 823. Crime by the Numbers 824. The value of p 825. The Tidyverse in a Table 826. Sample Size Justification 827. Learn tidytext with my new learnr course 828. Using random effects in […]
Hvorfor er flere respondenter ikke nødvendigvis bedre? #3
Avisen Danmark kan rapportere, at et nyt analyseinstitut ved navn Electica er begyndt at foretage politiske meningsmålinger: Det er en ny spiller på markedet, instituttet Electica, der har målt Nye Borgerlige til 11 procent, Venstre til 9,8 og Konservative til 12,6. Electica måler for Alliancen, der består af fagforbundene NNF, Blik & Rør, Dansk El-forbund […]