Jake Elder (@jake_elder52) 's Twitter Profile
Jake Elder

@jake_elder52

Behavioral Scientist @Vanguard_Group | PhD @UCRiverside | BA @UCLA

ID: 880814950607974400

linkhttps://jacobelder.github.io/ calendar_today30-06-2017 15:47:03

3,3K Tweet

985 Takipçi

1,1K Takip Edilen

Joao Pereira (@jdpereira) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I will die on this one: pay is the single largest gatekeeper we have in academia. This crap isn’t viable. It’s hurting people, and limiting the pool of talented folks that think it’s a good idea to do science or have the resources to do so.

Donald McKnight (@donaldmcknight2) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The informal poll results are in, & as I feared, most people are running ANOVAs in #R with functions that can give highly misleading (or flat out wrong) results. Follow along to see why using anova() and aov() is usually inadvisable & why you should be using car::Anova() 🧵

The informal poll results are in, & as I feared, most people are running ANOVAs in #R with functions that can give highly misleading (or flat out wrong) results. Follow along to see why using anova() and aov() is usually inadvisable & why you should be using car::Anova() 🧵
Robert Kubinec (@rmkubinec) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One thing I want to see change in the narrative is that this outcome is the fault of policy wonks & other "coastal elites." It's not. It's the outcome of the subversion of democratic processes that began with the Supreme Court's demolishing of campaign finance controls. (1/4)

Retraction Watch (@retractionwatch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Researchers find nearly 30% of papers “that stated significances (or their absence) are based on the presence of a single influential data point.” biorxiv.org/content/10.110…

Researchers find nearly 30% of papers “that stated significances (or their absence) are based on the presence of a single influential data point.”
biorxiv.org/content/10.110…
Nikolay Kukushkin (@niko_kukushkin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We think that all memory is stored in the brain. But our study published today in Nature Communications shows that all cells—even kidney cells—can count, detect patterns, store memories, and do so similarly to brain cells. My first (co)corresponding author paper!🧵nature.com/articles/s4146…

We think that all memory is stored in the brain. But our study published today in <a href="/NatureComms/">Nature Communications</a> shows that all cells—even kidney cells—can count, detect patterns, store memories, and do so similarly to brain cells. My first (co)corresponding author paper!🧵nature.com/articles/s4146…
Spencer Greenberg 🔍 (@spencrgreenberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In a remarkable new study, Simine Vizier (simine vazire), Sarah Schiavone (Sarah Schiavone), and Mijke Rhemtulla (Mijke Rhemtulla) surveyed 724 personality/social psychology researchers to investigate what they think of their own field. First, the good news: 🧵

Coby (@cobylefko) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Very exciting news to share!! My new (and first!) book, Building Optimism, is out now! The book is an exploration of why our cities and towns look the way they do, and how to make them more beautiful, walkable, healthy, genial, affordable, dynamic and generally more desirable.

Very exciting news to share!! My new (and first!) book, Building Optimism, is out now!

The book is an exploration of why our cities and towns look the way they do, and how to make them more beautiful, walkable, healthy, genial, affordable, dynamic and generally more desirable.
John B. Holbein (@johnholbein1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is still one of my favorite #dataviz of all time. It shows how sensitive results are in small samples. It provides raincloud plots with N=20 (on the left) & N=500 (right). There is no difference between the two conditions other than the N.

Ben Dicken (@benjdicken) 's Twitter Profile Photo

More languages, more insights! A few interesting takeaways: * Java and Kotlin are quick! Possible explanation: Google is heavily invested in performance here. * Js is really fast as far as interpreted / jit languages go. * Python is quite slow without things like PyPy.

Geoff MacDonald (@gmacdonalduoft) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Are singles with the least lifetime involvement in romantic relationships "single at heart" and therefore with the best well-being outcomes? Our new paper in Psychological Science suggests, on average, no (N = 77,064, mainly ≥ 50 years, 27 countries). journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09…

Mattan S. Ben-Shachar 🎗️🇮🇱🇺🇦 (@mattansb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

{effectsize} version 1.0.0 has been released! 🍕👹 Not many changes in this update, but this is quite a milestone 🥳 - the second stable package from easystats, with more to come soon! #rstats easystats.github.io/effectsize/

Florian Ederer (@florianederer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Academics from poorer socio-economic backgrounds are more likely to - not publish - have outstanding publication records - introduce more novel scientific concepts - less likely to receive recognition, as measured by citations, Nobel Prize nominations, and awards.

Academics from poorer socio-economic backgrounds are more likely to 
- not publish
- have outstanding publication records
- introduce more novel scientific concepts
- less likely to receive recognition, as measured by citations, Nobel Prize nominations, and awards.
Kareem Carr, Statistics Person (@kareem_carr) 's Twitter Profile Photo

According to a recent paper, the vast majority of academics gain their elite status the old-fashioned way, they were born with rich parents.

According to a recent paper, the vast majority of academics gain their elite status the old-fashioned way, they were born with rich parents.