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Thread: The Talk Stats Video Club

  1. #1
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    The Talk Stats Video Club



    After reading about the book club, I thought that a video club might be equally interesting.

    I found these two videos very good and well worth a watch:





    There are quite a few other interesting-looking videos on that site too.

    Has anyone else got any videos to share?
    Last edited by SiBorg; 09-08-2012 at 06:51 AM.

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  3. #2
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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    This one is only 3 minutes long and should please anybody with an interest in statistics. I think this guy has got it spot on...

    http://www.ted.com/talks/arthur_benj...education.html

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    I like this idea. I'll try to remember to participate if I come across good videos when I'm bored at work lol

    I watched a lot of TED talks. I like that Donnelly one. Good intuitive approach to talking about probability that people generally don't get, even students of probability!

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    DATA VISUALIZATION (Thanks to Quark for the YouTube tag!)


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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    I'm into making linguistic analysis meet statistics. here's a ted talk out of MIT that does so in a brilliant way (very multimodal):
    http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/deb...of_a_word.html

    "If you torture the data long enough it will eventually confess."
    -Ronald Harry Coase -

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    We'd discussed this before but it seems appropriate to repost here. This is a video and accompanying paper on motivation:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc


    The paper this video cites: LINK
    "If you torture the data long enough it will eventually confess."
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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    I love the RSA videos. I know I posted the link here (chatbox) and on facebook. I guess it could be appropriate to leave here. This one is from Sir Ken Robinson on changing how we view our educational paradigms. In particular, we need to consider that the way we have to learn today is different than how our educational system was initially designed around industry (set times, bells to signal change of tasks, learning in a set time frame within a set class of students, with set standards for what is appropriate). I think a lot of the ideas can mesh with the above video.


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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    This one I found in the related links to Sir Ken Robinson's TED talk (the 2006 one, I believe, which I recommend both! They're great). Just watching this video makes me want to go be a math teacher! lol


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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    I'm loving this guy's lectures. I'm still blown away that it's a political science class, because my friend's experience in masters of political science (international relations) was that the quantitative stuff was a joke. This guy's teaching me stats better than my econometric classes! lol Each of his lectures for this class are long, but he covers a lot of advanced details I never saw in my introductory classes. Very good explication. I especially like the geometric interpretation in his first lecture (Lecture "3" for week 3). The lecture below is covering some specific hypothesis testing stuff, and he begins with some nice examples of size vs power. The R examples help.


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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club



    Well, if you ever wanted to play around with Lisp, you need only start up Emacs! It actually makes a lot of sense, if you've ever at least looked at a Lisp interpreter. ****, Emacs is amazing!

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    I thought everybody knew that emacs had a lisp interpreter built in! You silly non-emacs users have a lot to learn...
    "His programming is malfunctioning. It begins! Get your weapons, he's going to become a killbot!!!" - bryangoodrich

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    Quote Originally Posted by Dason View Post
    I thought everybody knew that emacs had a lisp interpreter built in! You silly non-emacs users have a lot to learn...
    I guess everybody know the lisp interpreter part. For me the first part was learning the sloccount. I never knew something like this existed.

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club



    Lots of good education videos posted here. I'm glad about that. This is another treat. Have you checked out coursera yet?

  21. #14
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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club

    Thanks to everyone for making this thread so interesting. Can anyone let me know how to embed the video in the post rather than just the link as they look far more appealing that way! My first post looks a bit drab compared to the rest....!

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    Re: The Talk Stats Video Club


    The last youtube video posted used this for their code:


    [youtube]U6FvJ6jMGHU[/youtube]


    So basically you grab the id from the youtube url and put it inside the youtube tags.
    "His programming is malfunctioning. It begins! Get your weapons, he's going to become a killbot!!!" - bryangoodrich

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