We then wanted to find the cleanest possible way to analyze the data, so we worked with
a couple of statisticians to explore different analyses that might be appropriate and powerful enough to detect group differences and, in future, maybe even drug effects.
Not exact matches
Statisticians have long noted a higher rate
of divorce among
couples with a firstborn daughter compared to those who have a son.
This shift is observable in almost every advanced industrial country; ageing populations,
coupled with higher life expectancies, have lead
statisticians to forecast that over the next 15 years there will be a 56 percent increase in the number
of people aged over 602.
As a student
of climate science with some Physics training, member
of AGU and AMETSOC, and as professional
statistician, my view
of what I have seen is less like the situation in the medical community where sometimes statistics is brought in as an afterthought (but see http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/pub/Main/FHHandouts/bayes.short.course.pdf), and more that climate science is being asked to do more and more with less and less, including being
coupled to economic and policy models.