West Coast Stat Views (on Observational Epidemiology and more)

Comments, observations and thoughts from two bloggers on applied statistics, higher education and epidemiology. Joseph is an associate professor. Mark is a professional statistician and former math teacher.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Business models and secret sauces

›
As mentioned in the last post, today's New York Times has an article of the good people at Talx. One thing that caught my eye was this ...

Sleaziness as a business model -- first of two posts on Talx

›
Contesting Jobless Claims Becomes a Boom Industry By JASON DePARLE WASHINGTON — With a client list that reads like a roster ...
Friday, April 2, 2010

Statistics is common sense raised to a science

›
And Nate Silver is a very good statistician. From Five Thirty-eight : That de Rugy has testified before Congress on the basis of her evidenc...

More on social norming

›
Rajiv Sethi picks up the ball from Freakonomics and runs with it : This question lies at the heart of the lifelong work of Elinor Ostrom, c...
Thursday, April 1, 2010

In keeping with the season

›
Here's an April Fool's Day piece on joke-stealing, social norms and intellectual property (via Mark Thoma): ...Comedians have rules...

Two thoughts on April Fool's Day blogging

›
1. I'd better be careful linking to any too-good-to-be-true stories. 2. Wait a minute! This is the blogosphere; how much less reliable c...

Skipping the math

›
From Felix Salmon : Justin Fox sums up the overwhelming majority of economics papers in one sentence: The basic form of an academic economi...
Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Blockbusters, Franchises and Apostrophes

›
More on the economics of genre fiction The story so far: last week Andrew Gelman had a post on a book that discussed the dominance of best ...

Vanishing media

›
Brad Plummer shares the following examples of how ephemeral some of our art and images are: Actually, though, we don't even need to con...

Another outstanding (and tragic) economics story from This American Life

›
"A car plant in Fremont California that might have saved the U.S. car industry. In 1984, General Motors and Toyota opened NUMMI as a jo...

Let's talk about sex

›
More cool stuff from the New York Times' best science writer (not that the others have set the bar that high)
Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The real thing

›
Jaime Escalante dies at 79; math teacher who challenged East L.A. students to 'Stand and Deliver' Jaime Escalante, the charismatic f...

Today's pointer

›
I am on the road (trasporting 3 pets solo -- don't ask) so blooging is very light. But John D Cook brought up an interesting point toda...

Hey, I used to work there

›

The Decline of the Middle (Creative) Class

›
I suggested in an earlier post that the rise to dominance of the thriller had not been accompanied by a rise in quality and reputation. In ...
1 comment:
‹
›
Home
View web version

Contributors

  • Joseph
  • Mark
Powered by Blogger.