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  • How Doctors Use Your Data (and How AI Can Help)
    2024/11/18

    Dr. Steven Novella, clinical neurologist and host of The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe podcast joins us to share how he collects and analyzes data when he works with patients (there is so much more going on than I realized!) as well as how AI can hopefully improve the practice of medicine if we get it right. It's a longer episode than usual, but I hope you'll agree it's well worth it.


    Follow Steve:

    https://www.theskepticsguide.org/

    https://sciencebasedmedicine.org/

    https://theness.com/neurologicablog/


    Follow Andrea:

    https://www.jonesrooy.com/ and @jonesrooy on socials.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 時間 9 分
  • The (Often) False Promise of Personal Fitness Data
    2024/11/11

    Science journalist and athlete Christie Aschwanden takes us inside the not-so-scientific world of the fitness and health data that's tracked by various apps we probably own and/or are tempted to buy, and she helps us more carefully discern what's actually useful to follow and what we're better off ignoring. Plus -- an existentially (and scientifically!) important discussion about the power of uncertainty (and why it doesn't have to feel bad).


    Christie's Scientific American podcast is Uncertain. Her book is Good to Go: What the Athlete in All of Us Can Learn About the Strange Science of Recovery. You can read more about her and by here on her website.


    Follow AJR, your host, at @jonesrooy on Instagram and find out more here.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    40 分
  • How Movies and TV Affect Us
    2024/11/04

    When we think of data and movies the first (and maybe only) thing that comes to mind for many of us is movie reviews. But there is so much more we can learn about movies and ourselves if we just think outside the box a little bit and apply data and scientific thinking in creative ways. We talk with Walt Hickey, author of the book You Are What You Watch: How TV and Movies Affect Everything, about all kinds of exciting applications of data to track how movies affect us physically and emotionally, the value of exporting (and importing) culture internationally, whether superpowers predict evilness, how the plots of many movies have changed over time, why we like what we like, and how movies can change our entire life trajectory. Plus, prepare to learn why we should all watch Titanic again, as well as maybe consider (gasp) ignoring reviews of movies altogether.


    Relevant materials and links mentioned:


    • Buy Walt's book
    • Subscribe to Numlock
    • Check out Sherwood News
    • More about Walt
    • Follow Walt on X


    More on Andrea here and on Instagram.




    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    39 分
  • Why We Can't Seem to Agree on Crime Statistics
    2024/10/28

    Crime data is all over the news these days and, at least in the United States, it seems like you can tell any story you want to about whether crime is going up or down and whose fault it is. How should we be thinking about this data to figure out of what's really going on? We speak with Jeff Asher, crime data analyst and co-founder of JH Datalytics, which recently launched the Real-Time Crime Index, about where crime data comes from, why everyone seems to be disagreeing about it, and how to think and talk about it more clearly.


    Materials referenced in the show:


    • Jeff's company: https://www.ahdatalytics.com/
    • Jeff's substack: https://jasher.substack.com/
    • Real-Time Crime Index: https://realtimecrimeindex.com/
    • One of Jeff's articles about the crime data mess of a few years ago.


    Andrea is here and on Instagram.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 分
  • Political Polls
    2024/10/28

    Political polls are in our faces these days whether we want them or not -- especially if you're in the US during election season. We talk with polling expert and database journalist Dhrumil Mehta of Columbia University (formerly Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight) about how to think about polls. Are they all just noise? Do they tell the future? Something in the middle? Join us to explore where political polls come from, how to evaluate them, and how to make the most of the information they offer.


    Materials referenced in the show:


    • Example polling tracker from Nate Silver (Dhrumil and Andrea did not work on this version directly, but it is a "descendant" of a model they did work on.)
    • Nate Silver article, "The Media Has a Probability Problem", FiveThirtyEight
    • Harry Enten article, "Fake Polls are a Real Problem", FiveThirtyEight
    • Harry Enten article, "Trump is Just a Normal Polling Error Behind Clinton", FiveThirtyEight
    • Dhrumil's polls LLM: http://pollfinder.ai


    More about Andrea here and on Instagram. More about Dhrumil here and on X.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 分
  • Season 1 Trailer
    2024/10/21

    This is a short preview of what to expect in season 1! We'll have eight episodes coming out Mondays, beginning Oct. 28 with two episodes, and six weekly episodes after that through Dec. 9. We'll cover topics from political polls to crime data, from fitness apps to medical data, and from TV & movies to the health of democracy, and more! Join us to go to the root of the technological revolutions happening all around us -- as well as learn a bit more about ourselves along the way.


    You can find the show at BehindtheDataShow.com. We are proud members of the Daily Tech News Show ecosystem, and you can follow and learn more about host Andrea Jones-Rooy here and on Instagram.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 分