×

TED-Ed's video: The method that can prove almost anything - James A Smith

@The method that can "prove" almost anything - James A. Smith
Explore the data analysis method known as p-hacking, where data is misrepresented as statistically significant. -- In 2011, a group of researchers conducted a study designed to find an impossible result. Their study involved real people, truthfully reported data, and commonplace statistical analyses. So how did they do it? The answer lies in a statistical method scientists often use to try to figure out whether their results mean something, or if they’re random noise. James A. Smith explores p-hacking. Lesson by James A. Smith, directed by Anton Bogaty. Support Our Non-Profit Mission ---------------------------------------------- Support us on Patreon: http://bit.ly/TEDEdPatreon Check out our merch: http://bit.ly/TEDEDShop ---------------------------------------------- Connect With Us ---------------------------------------------- Sign up for our newsletter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdNewsletter Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/TEDEdFacebook Find us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdTwitter Peep us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/TEDEdInstagram ---------------------------------------------- Keep Learning ---------------------------------------------- View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-method-that-can-prove-almost-anything-james-a-smith Dig deeper with additional resources: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-method-that-can-prove-almost-anything-james-a-smith Animator's website: https://www.instagram.com/anton_bogaty Music: https://www.campstudio.co ---------------------------------------------- Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible! Sylvain, Can Aydogmus, JasonD, Terran Gimpel, Gareth Thomas, Talia Sari, Phan Quang Lam, Katie McDowell, Allen, Sarat Chandra Vegunta, Mahina Bachiller, Bruce Vieira Lopes, Charmaine Hanson, Paul Aldred-Bann, Thawsitt, Jezabel, Abdullah Abdulaziz, Adriano Fontes, Xiao Yu, Melissa Suarez, SpartacusDMR, Brian A. Dunn, Francisco Amaya, Daisuke Goto, Matt Switzler, Leonardo Monrroy, Sumedh Ghaisas, Maryam, Bethany Connor, Jeremy Shimanek, Mark Byers, Avinash Amarnath, Xuebicoco, Rare Media, Rayo, Po Foon Kwong, NinjaBoffin, Jesse Jurman, Josue Perez Miranda, Scott Markley, Elija Peterson, Ovidiu Mrd, Xavier dupont, paul g mohney, Aravind Battaje, Nathan Giusti, Helen Lee, Anthony Benedict, Karthik Balsubramanian and John Hong.

20.9K

1K
TED-Ed
Subscribers
20.1M
Total Post
2.2K
Total Views
85.2M
Avg. Views
835.7K
View Profile
This video was published on 2021-08-05 20:30:32 GMT by @TED-Ed on Youtube. TED-Ed has total 20.1M subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 2.2K video.This video has received 20.9K Likes which are lower than the average likes that TED-Ed gets . @TED-Ed receives an average views of 835.7K per video on Youtube.This video has received 1K comments which are lower than the average comments that TED-Ed gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.TED-Ed #digdeeper Animator's has been used frequently in this Post.

Other post by @TED Ed