P.J. Denyer
Penultimate Amazing
Or we can choose an arbiter to get our pay stubs and then publish snapshots of them simultaneously.
I'd happily volunteer.
Or we can choose an arbiter to get our pay stubs and then publish snapshots of them simultaneously.
I'd happily volunteer.
"You don't have the slightest idea about the physics behind the equipment either. You're basically suggesting the need of dealing with a Poisson distribution to examine the problem of the total number of clients served by all tellers in all branches in all banks in all countries during the whole century."The name of the "other variables"? I'd rather say you're a person very restricted in knowledge.You don't even know the "simplex method" and you allow yourself the buffoonery of voir diring me?
How deeply hurt you are, caught in the open in the full horror of your ignorance!
Neeners, neeners and I-dare-yous won't hide what you've already written: your failure addressing all these subjects.
For instance:
You don't have the slightest idea about the physics behind the equipment either. You're basically suggesting the need of dealing with a Poisson distribution to examine the problem of the total number of clients served by all tellers in all branches in all banks in all countries during the whole century.
You don't even know the slit width nor the times involved in Jeffers' or "your" modified Jeffers' (clearly specified by Jeffers' from the beginning), otherwise you would've refrained yourself of writing down such statistical tomfoolery.
That's just another piece of paranoid thinking we're so accustomed to read in your posts and the vanity press booklet you claim authorship.
You and Jeffers think that the double-slit picture is the example of a bell-shaped distribution...
I do not think so, and no one else does.
If you say that Jeffers was not referring to the deposition of particles as a randomization process, you should say what he was referring to; otherwise your remark is meaningless. What kind of process he was using to randomize the output? You totally misunderstood my presentation, so I will repeat it for you in simpler form -- I said that t-tests cannot be used to draw conclusions about tests that were not properly randomized. Jeffers test was not properly randomized because the distribution of particles is not a Gaussian process.Frantic appeals to Wikipedia don't cure the problem. You have no idea what the t-test is, how it works, or what it's used for.
Yes, and in Jeffers' experiment the scaling factor is unknown. But the real problem is that you don't know what variable in Jeffers' experiment the t-test was applied to. You niavely think it was the deposition of particles through the slit. That's not the variable Jeffers applied the t-test to. You fundamentally don't understand Jeffers' experiment design.
You simply copied what other people said without delving any deeper. Yes, people criticized Jeffers after the fact, nit-picking away at this or that. None of that criticism is valid, and it all came after he got the "wrong" answer. But more importantly, after he vetted his methods and apparatus with would-be critics.
Avoiding criticism was not his goal. I pointed out what he stated his goal to be. You're trying to shoehorn it into something else.
The kind of scientist who carefully states his goals and carefully explores alternative protocols to determine the potential confounds.
In your mind, this is what I am trying to do. Unfortunately, you cannot get out of your fantasy world and understand what the others are talking about.Indeed, he seems to think we can't see the pattern of someone initially denying a thing, and then slowly trying to come to terms with it and educate himself. Today, however, he seems to just be cherry-picking whatever passages he can Google that mention "normal distribution" in the same breath as "t-test."
For those of you playing at home, whatever underlying physical process is producing the output the subject is supposed to be manipulating with his, that's an independent variable in the experiment. It can follow whatever distribution it wants, but it's generally a good idea if it follows a normal distribution (i.e., is a random variable). What matters, however, is that it defies the subject's ability to predict by ordinary means. The dependent variable in the experiment is the degree to which the subjects' can actually change the behavior of that underlying process. That's supposed to follow a normal distribution.
If you say that Jeffers was not referring to the deposition of particles as a randomization process...
What kind of process he was using to randomize the output?
I said that t-tests cannot be used to draw conclusions about tests that were not properly randomized.
Jeffers test was not properly randomized because the distribution of particles is not a Gaussian process.
This is a topic that I gladly debate with you because it doesn't involve your fantasy ideas about mathematical statistics.
I am waiting for your response to this post.
This is your chance to show that audience that you can participate in a scientific discussion.
It was not a command but a request. You do not have to fulfill it. But failure to respond reflects negatively on your reputation, few board members will see you as a smart debater. On the other hand, you could ask me about any of past projects, and I will describe them. The audience will see a clear difference between our levels of professionalism.
But I did answer your question! It's in the italicized words. Not that you are educated to notice it. You don't know what the simplex method is and how a problem solved with it looks like.
You, name dropper, and your imaginary library. Sure, it's not the point (the point is after the non sequitur)
You are right in not considering the possibility I'm unwilling to follow your ridiculous "commands", why else are the "either... or..." in web forums made for ? Remember, we don't work for you. You work for us providing entertainment in exchange of you having a place where to blog your fantasies, including false achievements, jobs and possessions you could be proud of if real.
Then emigrate to Argentina -you're used to emigrate-. They give salaries and pension plans based on fantasies written on web forums. Or we can choose an arbiter to get our pay stubs and then publish snapshots of them simultaneously.
What exactly did you say? You totally misunderstood my critique of the Jeffers experiment. In this case I let the audience judge for themselves who is right and who is wrong. The way I see it, you are not ready for even a quasi-scientific discussion.I don't say that.
Already explained in a previous post.
Not relevant to your problem.
That's not how statistical modeling works.
Translation: I'm in over my head when it comes to statistics, so I desperately need to change the subject.
I'm sure you are, but as I promised we're going to continue talking about your inability to identify the dependent variable in these studies. If you can't do that, then it doesn't matter how much pseudo-engineering you think you can bring to the table. You will still fail fundamentally to understand this science, and therefor to offer valid criticism.
You don't know anything about experiment design. And by "experiment design" we don't mean the machine. We mean the statistical modeling and empirical controls. Those are the things you've set about criticizing up to now. So we're going to continue exposing your ignorance of those things until you can see them yourself and admit your error.
Gaslighting. Inept gaslighting, too.
In your mind...
What exactly did you say? You totally misunderstood my critique of the Jeffers experiment.
In this case I let the audience judge for themselves who is right and who is wrong.
The way I see it, you are not ready for even a quasi-scientific discussion.
Apparently, you cannot understand the material that I quoted, it says nothing about hyperbolic distribution. You draw your own conclusion based on imaginary data. Well, in the world of elves and warlocks everything is possible.And what about the independent variables?
This is why the t-test is not fundamentally built upon a normal distribution, but upon a hyperbolic distribution. The dependent variable in this case is PK ability. I agree in a normal human population, properly sampled, it should form a normal distribution. But in this case it is confounded with other factors, not the least of which in Jeffers' case is the specific expectation of behavior in the double-slit apparatus. You yourself admitted early on that some processes, all told, do not result in a normal distribution. When they do not, or when they do but cannot be properly parameterized by synthesis, then we must use the t-test.
it's interesting now that you admit the PK ability variable should be normally distributed. That rather flies in the face of your prior protests against excluding Operator 010 data because it did not fit an expected distribution. You told us we couldn't predict its expected distribution due to speculative factors. So which is it?
Apparently, you cannot understand the material that I quoted, it says nothing about hyperbolic distribution.
You draw your own conclusion based on imaginary data. Well, in the world of elves and warlocks everything is possible.
He's still obviously trying to pretend he's in good company. He keeps referring to all the other people who have also criticized Jeffers, and believes that he would be endorsed and vindicated by them. Curious thing, though. He can't really speak to what those critics actually say. Or make his criticism consistent with theirs.
If Buddha is to be believed, Jeffers is making elementary errors in statistics. So, apparently, was Palmer. Buddha expressed his disbelief that these people could be making such glaring mistakes. So you'd expect Buddha's other critics to pick up on that, right? Especially York Dobyns, PEAR's resident statistician who thought enough about it to write it up and publish it. Does Dobyns note all the same egregious statistical offenses Buddha tries to lay at Jeffers' feet? In fact he does not. You'd think that someone who found it advisable to publicly defend his group's work wouldn't mess around with the statistical esoterica that we read in Dobyns' published commentary. You'd think that he'd come right out and say stuff like, 'He can't use the t-test for significance here," just as Buddha has said. If that were the right answer, that is. But Dobyns seems to miss all the basic "blunders" that Buddha has found. Williams too. Also Alcock, who had plenty of chances to comment on the method before the study was even run. And somehow Jeffers' peer reviewers missed it all too. How did so many well-equipped, well-motivated people miss the very simple errors Buddha says he sees in Jeffers' original research?
Well, there's another possibility. They aren't really errors -- at least not on Jeffers' part. The myriad other reviewers and critics miss Buddha's "obvious" accusations because they're misunderstandings on Buddha's part.
You mentioned scientists who think that Jeffers, Alcock and Jeffers are right.
I could mention scientists who think that the trio is wrong; actually, a posted a link to the article whose author criticized Jeffers' experiment.
We have a difference of opinions here. which happens in many branches of science.
I am not the only one who exposed their errors, there are many others who did the same. But I prefer to do an analysis of my own, so I didn't quote them except for one.
Do you really think the gaslighting and insults are working for you?
John Gabriel's Greater Internet ******* Theory suggests that he probably doesn't even try it in meat space.I suspect it works well for him in meat space.
""""Buddha"""" said:Saying that I suggested something is a bold statement for a humble lab instructor because I didn’t supply enough material to imply anything. I just showed the audience two pictures: one of a normal distribution and the other one of a double-slit experiment, and asked the audience to compare them.