Har sammen med Kim Andersen skrevet et indlæg til TjekDet omkring metoden i den nye rapport fra Slots- og Kulturstyrelsen, ‘Mediernes udvikling i Danmark 2017‘. Konkret tager vi udgangspunkt i en påstand i rapporten om, at 92% af danske nyhedshistorier deles på Facebook. Der er som minimum to metodiske problemer, der begge relaterer sig til […]
Category: statistics
Potpourri: Statistics #39
312. What is the tidyverse? 313. Tips and tricks for working with images and figures in R Markdown documents 314. All hail ggplot2—The code powering all those excellent charts is 10 years old 315. The Only Probability Cheatsheet You’ll Ever Need 316. Formula Interface for ggplot2 317. State-space modelling of the Australian 2007 federal election […]
Potpourri: Statistik #38
303. How much statistics do psychological scientists need to know? Also, a reading list (De to bøger der nævnes i indlægget, Understanding Psychology as a Science og Statistical Rethinking, kan varmt anbefales.) 304. Defining Open Science Definitions 305. Same Stats, Different Graphs: Generating Datasets with Varied Appearance and Identical Statistics through Simulated Annealing 306. Correlates […]
Problems with the Big Five assessment in the World Values Survey
I have a new short paper titled Problems with the Big Five assessment in the World Values Survey in Personality and Individual Differences (co-authored with Steven Ludeke). In the paper, we examine basic psychometric properties of the Big Five personality traits included in Wave 6 of the World Values Survey. The abstract: Publicly-available data from […]
Potpourri: Statistik #37
294. UK government using R to modernize reporting of official statistics 295. Seeing Theory: A visual introduction to probability and statistics 296. Excel is threatening the quality of research data — Data Packages are here to help 297. Strange R Things 298. Social Media and Big Data Research 299. Announcing ggraph: A grammar of graphics […]