Academic and Scholarly Events

  • 2/15 Statistical Consulting Workshop-Free

    SCS 2019 Spring Semester Workshop Series

     

    Workshop 1:  Can dead fish be alive? - (Math-free workshop to) Modern statistical methods for testing multiple hypotheses

     

    Location, Date and Time:

    PBB 129, 11:00 am - 12:00 pm, February 15, 2019.

    Live steaming is available.

    Registration: http://merlot.stat.uconn.edu/www/consulting/workshops/register.php

     

    Abstract:

    If brain cells of a dead fish were tested, can we conclude if it's dead? When everyone thought running multiple tests would better support our claim, turns out, it rather leads to false conclusions; hence, the name "multiplicity problem". An overview of classical and modern multiplicity adjustment methods will be introduced controlling Family-wise Error Rate (FWER) and False Discovery Rate (FDR). Software details in R will be demonstrated. Real examples and applications will be presented. Don't revive a dead fish!

     

    Outline:

    - What is "multiplicity"?

    - When does "multiplicity" arise?

      - (Example 1) Can dead fish be alive?

      - (Example 2) Can one drug cure multiple diseases?

    - How can it be handled?

      - Procedures (Brace yourself for namedropping!)

      - Dead fish revisited

     - Drug test revisited

    - How else? (Modern method)

      - Parallel Gate Keeping

    For more information, contact: Tracy Burke at tracy.burke@uconn.edu