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Dominik Straub
@dominikstrb.bsky.social
PhD candidate - Centre for CogSci, TU Darmstadt | probabilistic models of perception and action | dominikstrb.github.io/
178 followers173 following8 posts
DSdominikstrb.bsky.social

This might be relevant: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti... Liddell & Kruschke (2018) show examples of false positives and false negatives when analyzing ordinal data with continuous models (Fig. 2)

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DSdominikstrb.bsky.social

same tbh :D

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DSdominikstrb.bsky.social

For me, the stress in Hypothese is on the third syllable. But I've also never heard Germans put the stress on the first syllable in hypothesis. More often I hear it on the third, following the German pronunciation.

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Reposted by Dominik Straub
APandyperfors.bsky.social

I have a bunch of things I have to get done, so naturally I decided to procrastinate by making an alignment chart of mathematical models

Lawful good: Bayesian models
Neutral good: Social network analysis
Chaotic good: Dynamical systems theory
Lawful neutral: Drift diffusion
True neutral: Information theory
Chaotic neutral: Agent-based models
Lawful evil: Symbolic logic
Neutral evil: Neural networks
Chaotic evil: Quantum mechanics
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DS
Dominik Straub
@dominikstrb.bsky.social
PhD candidate - Centre for CogSci, TU Darmstadt | probabilistic models of perception and action | dominikstrb.github.io/
178 followers173 following8 posts