usefully_useless
usefully_useless t1_j286gny wrote
Reply to comment by Zealousideal_Ad642 in TIL of the neenish tart - a type of pastry popular only in New Zealand, Australia and ... the Falkland Islands. by ScissorNightRam
Interesting. Thanks for the detailed reply!
usefully_useless t1_j284fj6 wrote
Reply to comment by Zealousideal_Ad642 in TIL of the neenish tart - a type of pastry popular only in New Zealand, Australia and ... the Falkland Islands. by ScissorNightRam
On a scale of plain buttercream to panna cotta, how gelatinous is the filling?
usefully_useless t1_ix4gguz wrote
Reply to comment by rebuilding-year in Honey improves key measures of cardiometabolic health, including blood sugar and cholesterol levels -; especially if the honey is raw and from a single floral source. Honey is a complex composition of common and rare sugars, proteins, organic acids and other bioactive compounds by Wagamaga
This exactly. Assuming the 20 factors are independent and that the true effect of each factor is zero (i.e. none of them actually do anything), then when using a 5% significance level the probability of finding statistical significance in at least one of the factors (at least one false positive) is about 64%.
There’s a reason that we’re facing a replication crisis, and that reason is the prevalence of p-hacking. (There’s an argument that the overwhelming preference for positive results in academic journals and the publication requirements most departments have for tenure are indirectly responsible for this problem as well, but that’s a different discussion.)
usefully_useless t1_iugb1rz wrote
Reply to comment by yankinfl in Richard Branson declines invitation to debate death penalty with Shanmugam, says TV format 'turns serious debate into spectacle' by chronoistriggered
Branson will look like more of an asshole for… opposing the death penalty?
usefully_useless t1_jaekznc wrote
Reply to comment by DaMan619 in Vanguard Target Funds sound safe but seem risky because of the high stock percentage by Late_Following8526
I’m pretty sure you meant to say 120-age in stocks, or age-20 in bonds.