October 18, 2021

Kākāpō for bogus poll of the year

It’s time for NZ’s Bird of the Year.  There are two important things to remember about Bird of the Year. First, if you’re going to talk about it on social media use the appropriate hashtag so normal people can mute you.  Second, Bird of the Year is a popularity contest driven by who votes and by last minute social influences; it doesn’t tell us anything new about the birds themselves or really even anything about their popularity in other settings. That’s not the thing you need to remember. The thing you need to remember is that all other online bogus clicky polls work the same way.

I’m campaigning for kākāpō because Zoe Luo, who is doing a PhD with me, is working on ways to model the genetics of rare species, using kākāpō as an example.  The entire kākāpō species had full genome sequencing done.  You usually can’t do that; Zoe is looking at how to use genome sequencing on a sample of the population together with other information on the rest of the birds to fit similar statistical models to the ones you would fit with full genome sequencing.  We can do this with the kākāpō because it’s easy to see what how well your models would work if you had less data than you really do — you can just ignore some of it — but it’s harder to see how well your models would work if you had more data than you really do.

 

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Thomas Lumley (@tslumley) is Professor of Biostatistics at the University of Auckland. His research interests include semiparametric models, survey sampling, statistical computing, foundations of statistics, and whatever methodological problems his medical collaborators come up with. He also blogs at Biased and Inefficient See all posts by Thomas Lumley »