December 31, 2021

Top non-rugby posts of the year

(The rugby prediction posts, while popular, are most interesting before the games actually happen: predicting the past is relatively easy)

First, the posts, regardless of year of writing, with most 2021 hits

  1.  What’s a Group 1 Carcinogen? (2013) Points out that the IARC classification is not about severity or danger but about the types and amounts of evidence. Sunlight is a Group 1 Carcinogen, so are alcohol and plutonium.
  2. A post about a Lotto strategy that doesn’t work(2012), as an argument about the usefulness of abstract theory. See also, the martingale optional stopping theorem
  3. A climate change post about graphs that shouldn’t have a zero on the y-axis(2015)
  4. From October 2020, but relevant to the news again in March this year, on crime rates in the Cuba/Courtenay area of Wellington and denominators
  5. Actually from July this year, one of the StatsChat Dialogues: Q: Did you see that learning maths can affect your brain? A: Well, yes. There wouldn’t be much point otherwise

And the top 2021-vintage posts

  1. Number 5 from the previous list
  2. From October, on interpreting vaccination percentages
  3. From April, why there’s so much fuss about very rare adverse reactions to vaccines (the AZ blood clots)
  4. From October, why population structure matters to epidemic control, aka, why we need to vaccinate every subgroup. Has pictures!
  5. From June, how a cap-and-trade system for (a subset of) emissions messes up our intuition about other climate interventions.

These are WordPress page views: their relationship to actual readership is complicated; keep in a cool, dry place away from children; may contain nuts.

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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 »

Comments

  • avatar
    Brent Jackson

    Thanks a lot for your interesting posts about various statistics that are in the news. I particularly like the dry humour inherent to your Q&A posts. Thanks.

    3 years ago

  • avatar

    A good public service! Do you know how many people regularly check out your posts? HNY. peter

    3 years ago