Editing Talk:882: Significant

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::You know this experiment isn't conducted properly when you know you're in the control group. [[User:Troy|Troy]] ([[User talk:Troy|talk]]) 05:24, 4 March 2014 (UTC)
 
::You know this experiment isn't conducted properly when you know you're in the control group. [[User:Troy|Troy]] ([[User talk:Troy|talk]]) 05:24, 4 March 2014 (UTC)
 
:::So you have to somehow convince them they are playing Minecraft, when in fact they are not. That's easy, select people who have never played the game. But what if KNOWING the game is Minecraft is what cures cancer? Oh boy... [[User:Cflare|Cflare]] ([[User talk:Cflare|talk]]) 13:57, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
 
:::So you have to somehow convince them they are playing Minecraft, when in fact they are not. That's easy, select people who have never played the game. But what if KNOWING the game is Minecraft is what cures cancer? Oh boy... [[User:Cflare|Cflare]] ([[User talk:Cflare|talk]]) 13:57, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
:::: Give the active group Minecraft, give the control group Survivalcraft or any other knockoff version of Minecraft. Scientists! Investigate! [[User:Herobrine|Herobrine]] ([[User talk:Herobrine|talk]]) 04:34, 3 March 2018 (UTC)
 
  
 
Um, I take it that whoever explained this comic can't tell the difference between < and >, as the fact that the confidence was changed wasn't mentioned in the article... [[Special:Contributions/76.246.37.141|76.246.37.141]] 23:19, 20 September 2013 (UTC)
 
Um, I take it that whoever explained this comic can't tell the difference between < and >, as the fact that the confidence was changed wasn't mentioned in the article... [[Special:Contributions/76.246.37.141|76.246.37.141]] 23:19, 20 September 2013 (UTC)
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This comic was referenced in the book "How Not to be Wrong" by Jordan Ellenberg. [[User:SilverMagpie|SilverMagpie]] ([[User talk:SilverMagpie|talk]]) 20:41, 21 January 2017 (UTC)
 
This comic was referenced in the book "How Not to be Wrong" by Jordan Ellenberg. [[User:SilverMagpie|SilverMagpie]] ([[User talk:SilverMagpie|talk]]) 20:41, 21 January 2017 (UTC)
 
One thing I've gleaned from this is that they apparently opened a bag of Jelly Bellys or Gimball's and tested them in whatever order. I say this because they hit colors you'd never see in the smaller-palette brands of jelly beans (brown, teal, salmon) before some very common colors (red, yellow, black, green). If it were me, I would probably have started with a smaller-palette brand, since their colors affect ''everyone'' who eats jelly beans, and not just the ones who go for the gourmet brands. [[User:Nyperold|Nyperold]] ([[User talk:Nyperold|talk]]) 12:58, 6 July 2017 (UTC)
 
 
This kind of error is why you use ANOVA.
 
[[Special:Contributions/162.158.63.238|162.158.63.238]] 20:21, 29 October 2018 (UTC)
 
 
Want to reiterate that using "95% confidence" for statistical significance means having a threshold of <.05 for the p-value, and the p-value is the probability noise alone would have generated a change this big or bigger.  If all you ran all day long were a/a tests (randomly assign people to two groups but give them the exact same experience) then 5% of your tests would be stat sig for any given metric.  However, the chance of at least one false positive over 20 tests is only 64% (1-.95^20), not 100%.  But of course, you also might get MORE than 1 false positive in 20 experiments, so the expected value for the NUMBER of false positives after 20 experiments IS 1.  If that hurt your brain, welcome to probability!
 

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