Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile
Fan Li

@fanliduke

Professor@Duke, Statistician, Data Scientist, Causal Inference researcher

ID: 1772266132797259776

calendar_today25-03-2024 14:16:36

54 Tweet

1,1K Followers

122 Following

Adam Grant (@adammgrant) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Writing is more than a vehicle for communicating ideas. It's a tool for crystallizing ideas. Writing exposes gaps in your knowledge and logic. It pushes you to articulate assumptions and consider counterarguments. One of the best paths to sharper thinking is frequent writing.

Kaidi Wu, Ph.D. (@kaidi_wu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

⚠️For PhDs who are thinking about jumping ship and diving into industry: Industry isn't necessarily better than academia. I have straddled both worlds. Here are 5 MYTHS about academia vs. industry:

⚠️For PhDs who are thinking about jumping ship and diving into industry: 

Industry isn't necessarily better than academia. 

I have straddled both worlds. Here are 5 MYTHS about academia vs. industry:
Giuseppe Cavaliere (@cavalieregiu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hi #EconTwitter! 📈 Curious about the Bayesian take on causal inference? If so, you should check out the material from Fan Li's (Duke University) "Bayesian Causal Inference" course, along with the review paper by Fan Li and Fabrizia Mealli (Università di Firenze)! 📚 They carefully

Hi #EconTwitter! 📈

Curious about the Bayesian take on causal inference?

If so, you should check out the material from <a href="/FanLiDuke/">Fan Li</a>'s (<a href="/DukeU/">Duke University</a>) "Bayesian Causal Inference" course, along with the review paper by <a href="/FanLiDuke/">Fan Li</a> and <a href="/fabri_mealli/">Fabrizia Mealli</a> (<a href="/UNI_FIRENZE/">Università di Firenze</a>)! 📚

They carefully
Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excellent point. Serving as the editor for Social Science, Biostatistics, Policy at Annals of Applied Statistics, I have spent countless hours reviewing papers, burned social capitals, offending many authors (rejecting their papers). My stipend? 0. Is the system sustainable?

Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Peer reviewed publications overstate how well anti-depressants work because the published literature omits lots of conflicting results🧵 When the FDA does their reviews, they notice lots of unpublished studies that tend to show the drugs are less effective.

Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Saw many cicada shells everywhere lately. Turned out two different broods of cicadas (one on a 13 yr and other on a 17 yr cycle -- two prime numbers) emerge at the same time from underground this year, first time since 1803, next time? 2024+17X13=2245.

Saw many cicada shells everywhere lately. Turned out two different broods of cicadas (one on a 13 yr and other on a 17 yr cycle -- two prime numbers) emerge at the same time from underground this year, first time since 1803, next time? 2024+17X13=2245.
JAMA (@jama_current) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🧵 New Special Communication examines drawing causal inferences about the effects of interventions from observational studies in medical journals and suggests a framework that might be used. ja.ma/3UxeAjL

🧵 New Special Communication examines drawing causal inferences about the effects of interventions from observational studies in medical journals and suggests a framework that might be used.

ja.ma/3UxeAjL
SSRC (@ssrc_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In ASA JASA, Anqi Zhao & Peng Ding consider alternative strategies to address covariate missingness in randomized experiments and recommend including missingness indicators when estimating average treatment effects. tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108…

In <a href="/AmstatNews/">ASA</a> JASA, Anqi Zhao &amp; <a href="/pengding00/">Peng Ding</a> consider alternative strategies to address covariate missingness in randomized experiments and recommend including missingness indicators when estimating average treatment effects.

tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108…
Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Good stat joke. Once in a party, the late Susie Bayarri (one of the great Bayesians) and a few of us were discussing who is the statistician divorced the most times. Susie said: "He must be a frequentist!"

ASA History of Statistics Special Interest Group (@hos_asa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The word ‘algorithm’ is surprisingly old. It was derived from ‘algorizmi’, the Latinised surname of the mathematician Abu Ja'far Mohammed Ben Musa Al-Khwarizmi (c. 780 - c.850). His writings were translated into Latin by Robert of Chester in the 12th c. 1/3

The word ‘algorithm’ is surprisingly old. It was derived from ‘algorizmi’, the Latinised surname of the mathematician Abu Ja'far Mohammed Ben Musa Al-Khwarizmi (c. 780 - c.850). His writings were translated into Latin by Robert of Chester in the 12th c. 1/3
Peng Ding (@pengding00) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is an interesting and useful trick. However, centering factors has some special restrictions on the estimated factorial effects when there are more than 3 factors (3 is the magic number there!). This motivates us to write this paper: academic.oup.com/biomet/article…

Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Twitter academia: 1. I am happy to announce xx (whatever trivial) 2. I am thrilled/excited that xx (papers, grants, promotion) 3. I am honored that xx ("awards" in all senses) Adding to that list now: "How I publish xx papers in x years" What next? How I become god?

Fan Li (@fanliduke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I was often asked by practitioners about power calculations for causal inference with observational data, a hard problem with little leads. Finally had a clean solution, thanks to my spectacular student Bo Liu. Here it is: arxiv.org/abs/2501.11181 cran.r-project.org/web/packages/P…