I have results that say the following:A = BB = CA != Clolwut? maybe I should have paid attention when I took the class.
9/28/2010 6:09:46 PM
k
9/28/2010 6:11:35 PM
k doesn't come into play for these analyses. that's a different data set.
9/28/2010 6:13:13 PM
9/28/2010 6:15:16 PM
i thought stats was easy.i kinda liked it.but it was the only math class i "got".i just completely understood it.i hoever have no idea what you are talking about lol[Edited on September 28, 2010 at 6:18 PM. Reason : V oops]
9/28/2010 6:15:19 PM
9/28/2010 6:17:59 PM
I mean, are your df the same?Are you using an identical significance value?Universal sample sizes?come on wdprice3, help US help YOU.
9/28/2010 6:18:02 PM
9/28/2010 6:20:12 PM
9/28/2010 6:21:37 PM
more like I hate random processes
9/28/2010 6:22:36 PM
98.3% of all U.S. citizens hate statistics
9/28/2010 6:22:57 PM
likely probability
9/28/2010 6:23:22 PM
the more you learn about statistics, the less you will trust them
9/28/2010 6:25:51 PM
it is witchcraft and devilty
9/28/2010 6:26:40 PM
^^exactly
9/28/2010 6:29:46 PM
stats is fucking easy, at least at the undergrad level.
9/28/2010 6:30:22 PM
^
9/28/2010 6:31:27 PM
9/28/2010 6:32:12 PM
9/28/2010 6:33:08 PM
9/28/2010 6:38:50 PM
99% of statistics is 100% bullshit.
9/28/2010 6:40:05 PM
9/28/2010 6:41:20 PM
9/28/2010 8:43:44 PM
i had one class of that in undergraduate and i was -------- that close to shooting my teacher in the face
9/29/2010 1:04:20 AM
stats is cake for undergrad. grad level statistics is harder but not grad level hard.
9/29/2010 1:07:17 AM
I have a ST371 test tomorrow.I went to class once (2 days ago) to turn in homework, and left as soon as he started talking about what a sample size was.cool huh?I'm AstralAdvent and i approved this message.
9/29/2010 1:56:45 AM
A results B and B results C but A does not result C ?
9/29/2010 2:18:58 AM
^correct
11/12/2010 2:21:23 PM
When I took statistics it was nothing more than a class to show proofs for things related to calculus. It sucked.
11/12/2010 2:32:29 PM
le sigh. this isn't a class. this is real shit.
11/12/2010 2:33:23 PM
i'm in a stat class this falli swear it's special ed or something
11/12/2010 2:43:49 PM
237 out of 299 people hate that shit.
11/12/2010 2:53:30 PM
i recommend you graff that shizzzz
11/12/2010 2:59:33 PM
5/4 people have a problem with fractions
11/12/2010 9:11:34 PM
11/12/2010 9:16:41 PM
I see all the obvious jokes have been made. Well done.
11/12/2010 9:21:36 PM
Transitive property does not work in the real worlds? I never took a stats class, not sure how I avoided them but alas I was successful. The stats/probability section on the FE was easy as hell dough.
11/13/2010 11:11:39 AM
11/13/2010 11:14:21 AM
whatcha workin on manstats are easy at the undergraduate level but, as with most mathematics, the whole story is not easy
11/13/2010 1:55:44 PM
it was my research; not a class or anything. bacteria levels. twas a bitch
12/16/2010 8:09:19 PM
^ I think you got the wrong answer.
12/16/2010 8:54:55 PM
zombie bacteria?
12/16/2010 9:10:02 PM
Maybe I'm getting trolled, but could you be a little more specific? Are those composite hypotheses? Independent ones? Contrasts/Comparisons? What is your model? What are your assumptions? What is your design?It's hard to know what you are talking about with any detail.
12/17/2010 12:35:29 AM
12/17/2010 12:59:24 AM
^ST 371. We covered probabilities and the like in the first 2 or 3 classes. The rest of the semester was spent doing formal proofs of various calculus principles.The professor was out quite often because he was an expert witness on a murder trial. In the trial he played the part of C3PO, calculating and communicating the probability of the DNA evidence at the crime scene not matching the suspect's DNA.That class sucked. After the first test all remaining tests were about formal proofs. So other people taking stats with a different professor got to say the odds of picking a green jellybean were 20%. We had to show a proof for what would happen if people were constantly adding and removing green jellybeans in an environment where the rate of white jellybeans doubled every 10 minutes.... squared. A poor example, but it's been too long for me to remember. IIRC most proofs were related to calculus principles, not really related to statistics at all.It's a class I want to forget have forgotten.I guess it all depends on your professor. There was another class like that MA 305 "Introductory Linear Algebra and Matrices". Most people I knew got stuck doing proofs. I took it in the summer and it was really easy. Plug in the number, chug, get the answer. No proofs whatsoever.[Edited on December 17, 2010 at 10:55 AM. Reason : -]
12/17/2010 10:41:34 AM
use the convolution integral.
12/17/2010 3:10:51 PM
12/18/2010 5:20:31 PM
sounds more topology or set theory
12/18/2010 8:14:47 PM
Well, what he is talking about is an extension of set theory. Each hypothesis is a mapped to a rejection region, which is a set in R^k, where k is the number of hypotheses being tested. So this actually an extension of set theory, but the sets themselves are random.
12/19/2010 11:16:55 PM
i cant believe i understood what neolithic saiddamn, i've become a nerd.
12/19/2010 11:19:13 PM