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6 votes
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A new way to achieve nuclear fusion: Helion
5 votes -
US to announce fusion energy ‘breakthrough’
13 votes -
Listening to podcasts may help satisfy our psychological need for social connection, study finds
12 votes -
The US government is giving out free wasps
8 votes -
The elements of change: A grand unified theory of self-help
7 votes -
Scientists discovered the oldest known DNA and used it to reveal what life was like two million years ago in the northern tip of Greenland
4 votes -
Finnish research and technology organisation VTT connected the quantum computer HELMI with the pan-European supercomputer LUMI to enable a hybrid service for researchers
3 votes -
Neuralink is under federal investigation for potential animal-welfare violations amid internal staff complaints that its animal testing is being rushed, causing needless suffering and deaths
7 votes -
How do fireflies flash in sync? Studies suggest a new answer.
3 votes -
The story of solar-grade silicon
2 votes -
US bat species devastated by fungus now listed as endangered
2 votes -
The turntable paradox: A ball on a spinning turntable won't fly off as you might expect. In fact the ball will have it's own little orbit exactly 2/7th the angular speed of the table. Here's why.
6 votes -
Can anyone recommend a specific type of statistics course?
I would like to find a good Statistics course to do for myself, and also to recommend to others, down the road ... one that specifically focuses on risk, and the discrepancy between actual...
I would like to find a good Statistics course to do for myself, and also to recommend to others, down the road ... one that specifically focuses on risk, and the discrepancy between actual statistical probability vs humans' intuitive sense of risk.
I recall a quote, which The Interwebs informs me right now, came from Albert A. Bartlett ... "The Greatest Shortcoming of the Human Race Is Man’s Inability To Understand the Exponential Function".
Alternately, Mark Twain popularized (but did not originate) the saying "There are lies, damned lies, and statistics".
That's the kind of course I'm looking for, that focuses on questions like how much should we actually worry about supervolcanoes, asteroid strikes, Covid 2.0, WWIII, Trump getting re-elected, etc.
There are two parts to this. One, people often (naturally, human nature, how our brains are wired to handle Risk) obsess about a short list of risks in life that are overblown, or appear to be more of a concern than they actually are.
The other part is, some things have a very small risk of actually happening, but when considered in conjunction with the potential consequences (asteroid strikes, WWIII, global pandemic), are still worthy of aggressive efforts to prevent ... and people often focus on the first element (statistically unlikely) and dismiss or overlook the second piece (devastating consequences).
Anyway, stuff like that ... ideally an actual, hands-on MOOC-type Statistics course, but even a good youtube video or blog article would suffice.
As usual, thanks in advance.
5 votes -
The world generates so much data that new unit measurements were created to keep up
7 votes -
How to speak honeybee
7 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement: The dark and mysterious origins of Denmark’s psychiatric brain collection
6 votes -
New evidence indicates that an effort to stamp out disease-carrying insects is working. The key? Mosquitoes genetically engineered to kill off their own kind.
5 votes -
The world depends on this government warehouse's collection of strange Standard Reference Materials. They're not cheap.
1 vote -
10,000 brains in a basement – the dark and mysterious origins of Denmark's psychiatric brain collection
8 votes -
Logic gates made of DNA beat me at tic-tac-toe
5 votes -
The man who tried to fake an element
4 votes -
Science has a nasty Photoshopping problem
7 votes -
Sound
6 votes -
The nurse who introduced gloves to the operating room
9 votes -
Neurons in a dish learn to play Pong — what’s next?
5 votes -
Svante Pääbo deserves his accolade – palaeogenetics is an expanding field that tells us who we are
5 votes -
Swedish researcher Svante Pääbo has won this year's Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research into how human beings evolved
12 votes -
Bucking convention to track the upside of invasive species
6 votes -
The CIA just invested in woolly mammoth resurrection technology
8 votes -
Lithium removal with household water purification devices
5 votes -
No one in physics dares say so, but the race to invent new particles is pointless
12 votes -
Investigating toxicity changes of cross-community Redditors from two billion posts and comments
9 votes -
US physics body concedes mistakes in study of missile defense
8 votes -
How petrol pumps know when to turn themselves off
10 votes -
2022 Golden Goose Award mini-documentary
4 votes -
These metals destroy themselves to prevent rust
7 votes -
Why (and how) over 600,000 bird specimens are preserved at the Smithsonian | Colossal Collections
4 votes -
This massive truck makes artificial earthquakes
3 votes -
How to build a GPT-3 for science
5 votes -
OSTP issues guidance to make Federally funded research freely available without delay
12 votes -
Physics duo finds magic in two dimensions
4 votes -
On the hunt for ginormous effect sizes
5 votes -
Fossil of ‘earliest animal predator’ is named after David Attenborough
9 votes -
Reaching closer to Earth's core, one lava scoop at a time – 2021 eruption in Iceland gave researchers rare and illuminating access to the mantle
5 votes -
The weed influencer and the scientist feuding over why some stoners incessantly puke
10 votes -
Gallium: The liquid metal that could transform soft electronics
7 votes -
Why are quintic equations not solvable? - the Galois theory approach
3 votes -
Allen Carr’s ‘Easy Way’ method helped millions quit smoking, but medicine never took it seriously — until now
8 votes -
LHCb (Large Hadron Collider beauty) experiment discovers three new exotic particles
11 votes