This course aims to help you to ask better statistical questions when performing empirical research. We will discuss how to design informative studies, both when your predictions are correct, as when your predictions are wrong. We will question norms, and reflect on how we can improve research practices to ask more interesting questions. In practical hands on assignments you will learn techniques and tools that can be immediately implemented in your own research, such as thinking about the smallest effect size you are interested in, justifying your sample size, evaluate findings in the literature while keeping publication bias into account, performing a meta-analysis, and making your analyses computationally reproducible.

Improving Your Statistical Questions

Improving Your Statistical Questions

Instructor: Daniel Lakens
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What you'll learn
Ask better questions in empirical research
Design more informative studies
Evaluate the scientific literature taking bias into account
Reflect on current norms, and how you can improve your research practices
Skills you'll gain
Tools you'll learn
Details to know

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There are 6 modules in this course
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Reviewed on Jan 2, 2020
Excellent! Would like only one addition, and that's a more extensive exercise on simulating data with general linear models
Reviewed on Dec 31, 2019
Cracking - very informative, nice mixture of modes of learning, and engaging
Reviewed on Dec 18, 2023
This was the best course that I have ever taken. Professor Lakens's excellent expression and wonderful lesson plan have created a thought-provoking review. I sincerely thank him
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