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313 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
313 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Week 3
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showthedate: false
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---
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## tl;dr
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People are busy, especially managers and leaders. Results of data analyses are sometimes presented in oral form, but often the first cut is presented via email.
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It is often useful therefore, to breakdown the results of an analysis into different levels of granularity/detail
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## Hierarchy of Information: Research Paper
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- Title / Author List
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- Speaks about what the paper is about
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- Hopefully interesting
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- No detail
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- Abstract
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- Motivation of the problem
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- Bottom Line Results
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- Body / Results
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- Methods
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- More detailed results
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- Sensitivity Analysis
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- Implication of Results
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- Supplementary Materials / Gory Details
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- Details on what was done
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- Code / Data / Really Gory Details
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- For reproducibility
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## Hierarchy of Information: Email Presentation
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- Subject Line / Subject Info
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- At a minimum: include one
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- Can you summarize findings in one sentence?
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- Email Body
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- A brief description of the problem / context: recall what was proposed and executed; summarize findings / results. (Total of 1-2 paragraphs)
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- If action is needed to be taken as a result of this presentation, suggest some options and make them as concrete as possible
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- If questions need to be addressed, try to make them yes / no
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- Attachment(s)
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- R Markdown file
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- knitr report
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- Stay Concise: Don't spit out pages of code
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- Links to Supplementary Materials
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- Code / Software / Data
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- Github Repository / Project Website
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## DO: Start with Good Science
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- Remember: Garbage, in, garbage out
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- Find a coherent focused question. This helps solve many problems
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- Working with good collaborators reinforces good practices
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- Something that's interesting to you will hopefully motivate good habits
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## DON'T: Do Things By Hand
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- Editing spreadsheets of data to "clean it up"
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- Removing outliers
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- QA / QC
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- Validating
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- Editing tables or figures (e.g rounding, formatting)
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- Downloading data from a website
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- Moving data around your computer, splitting, or reformatting files.
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Things done by hand need to precisely documented (this is harder than it sounds!)
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## DON'T: Point and Click
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- Many data processing / statistical analysis packages have graphical user interfaces (GUIs)
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- GUIs are convenient / intuitive but the actions you take with a GUI can be difficult for others to reproduce
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- Some GUIs produce a log file or script which includes equivalent commands; these can be saved for later examination
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- In general, be careful with data analysis software that is highly interactive; ease of use can sometimes lead to non-reproducible analyses.
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- Other interactive software, such as text editors, are usually fine.
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## DO: Teach a Computer
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If something needs to be done as part of your analysis / investigation, try to teach your computer to do it (even if you only need to do it once)
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In order to give your computer instructions, you need to write down exactly what you mean to do and how it should be done. Teaching a computer almost guarantees reproducibility
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For example, by, hand you can
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1. Go to the UCI Machine Learning Repository at http://archive.ics.uci.edu/mil/
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2. Download the Bike Sharing Dataset
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Or you can teach your computer to do it using R
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```R
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download.file("http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/machine-learning-databases/00275/Bike-Sharing-Dataset.zip", "ProjectData/Bike-Sharing-Dataset.zip")
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```
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Notice here that:
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- The full URL to the dataset file is specified
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- The name of the file saved to your local computer is specified
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- The directory to which the filed was saved is specified ("ProjectData")
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- Code can always be executed in R (as long as link is available)
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## DO: Use Some Version Control
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It helps you slow things down by adding changes into small chunks. (Don't just do one massive commit). It allows one to track / tag snapshots so that one can revert back to older versions of the project. Software like Github / Bitbucket / SourceForge make it easy to publish results.
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## DO: Keep Track of Your Software Environment
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If you work on a complex project involving many tools / datasets, the software and computing environment can be critical for reproducing your analysis.
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**Computer Architecture**: CPU (Intel, AMD, ARM), CPU Architecture, GPUs
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**Operating System**: Windows, Mac OS, Linux / Unix
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**Software Toolchain**: Compilers, interpreters, command shell, programming language (C, Perl, Python, etc.), database backends, data analysis software
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**Supporting software / infrastructure**: Libraries, R packages, dependencies
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**External dependencies**: Websites, data repositories, remote databases, software repositories
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**Version Numbers:** Ideally, for everything (if available)
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This function in R helps report a bunch of information relating to the software environment
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```R
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sessionInfo()
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```
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## DON'T: Save Output
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Avoid saving data analysis output (tables, figures, summaries, processed data, etc.), except perhaps temporarily for efficiency purposes.
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If a stray output file cannot be easily connected with the means by which it was created, then it is not reproducible
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Save the data + code that generated the output, rather than the output itself.
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Intermediate files are okay as long as there is clear documentation of how they were created.
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## DO: Set Your Seed
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Random number generators generate pseudo-random numbers based on an initial seed (usually a number or set of numbers)
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In R, you can use the `set.seed()` function to set the seed and to specify the random number generator to use
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Setting the seed allows for the stream of random numbers to be exactly reproducible
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Whenever you generate random numbers for a non-trivial purpose, **always set the seed**.
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## DO: Think About the Entire Pipeline
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- Data analysis is a lengthy process; it is not just tables / figures/ reports
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- Raw data -> processed data -> analysis -> report
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- How you got the end is just as important as the end itself
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- The more of the data analysis pipeline you can make reproducible, the better for everyone
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## Summary: Checklist
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- Are we doing good science?
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- Is this interesting or worth doing?
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- Was any part of this analysis done by hand?
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- If so, are those parts precisely documented?
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- Does the documentation match reality?
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- Have we taught a computer to do as much as possible (i.e. coded)?
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- Are we using a version control system?
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- Have we documented our software environment?
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- Have we saved any output that we cannot reconstruct from original data + code?
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- How far back in the analysis pipeline can we go before our results are no longer (automatically reproducible)
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## Replication and Reproducibility
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Replication
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- Focuses on the validity of the scientific claim
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- Is this claim true?
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- The ultimate standard for strengtening scientiffic evidence
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- New investigators, data, analytical methods, laboratories, instruments, etc.
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- Particularly important in studies that can impact broad policy or regulatory decisions.
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Reproducibility
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- Focuses on the validity of the data analysis
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- Can we trust this analysis?
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- Arguably a minimum standard for any scientific study
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- New investigators, same data, same methods
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- Important when replication is impossible
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## Background and Underlying Trends
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- Some studies cannot be replicated: No time, no money, or just plain unique / opportunistic
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- Technology is increasing data collection throughput; data are more complex and high-dimensional
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- Existing databases can be merged to become bigger databases (but data are used off-label)
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- Computing power allows more sophisticated analyses, even on "small" data
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- For every field "X", there is a "Computational X"
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## The Result?
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- Even basic analyses are difficult to describe
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- Heavy computational requirements are thrust upon people without adequate training in statistics and computing
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- Errors are more easily introduced into long analysis pipelines
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- Knowledge transfer is inhibited
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- Results are difficult to replicate or reproduce
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- Complicated analyses cannot be trusted
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## What Problem Does Reproducibility Solve?
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What we get:
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- Transparency
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- Data Availability
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- Software / Methods of Availability
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- Improved Transfer of Knowledge
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What we do NOT get
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- Validity / Correctness of the analysis
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An analysis can be reproducible and still be wrong
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We want to know 'can we trust this analysis
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Does requiring reproducibility deter bad analysis?
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## Problems with Reproducibility
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The premise of reproducible research is that with data/code available, people can check each other and the whole system is self-correcting
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- Addresses the most "downstream" aspect of the research process -- Post-publication
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- Assumes everyone plays by the same rules and wants to achieve the same goals (i.e. scientific discovery)
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## Who Reproduces Research?
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- For reproducibility to be effective as a means to check validity, someone needs to do something
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- Re-run the analysis; check results match
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- Check the code for bugs/errors
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- Try alternate approaches; check sensitivity
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- The need for someone to do something is inherited from traditional notion of replication
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- Who is "someone" and what are their goals?
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## The Story So Far
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- Reproducibility brings transparency (wrt code+data) and increased transfer of knowledge
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- A lot of discussion about how to get people to share data
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- Key question of "can we trust this analysis"? is not addressed by reproducibility
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- Reproducibility addresses potential problems long after they've occurred ("downstream")
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- Secondary analyses are inevitably colored by the interests/motivations of others.
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## Evidence-based Data Analysis
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- Most data analyses involve stringing together many different tools and methods
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- Some methods may be standard for a given field, but others are often applied ad hoc
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- We should apply throughly studied (via statistical research), mutually agreed upon methods to analyze data whenever possible
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- There should be evidence to justify the application of a given method
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## Evidence-based Data Analysis
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- Create analytic pipelines from evidence-based components - standardize it
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- A deterministic statistical machine
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- Once an evidence-based analytic pipeline is established, we shouldn't mess with it
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- Analysis with a "transparent box"
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- Reduce the "research degrees of freedom"
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- Analogous to a pre-specified clinical trial protocol
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## Case Study: Estimating Acute Effects of Ambient Air Pollution Exposure
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- Acute / Short-term effects typically estimated via panel studies or time series studies
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- Work originated in late 1970s early 1980s
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- Key question "Are short-term changes in pollution associated with short-term changes in a population health outcome?"
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- Studies are usually conducted at a community level
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- Long history of statistical research investigating proper methods of analysis
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## Case Study: Estimating Acute Effects of Ambient Air Pollution Exposure
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- Can we encode everything that we have found in statistical / epidemiological research into a single package?
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- Time series studies do not have a huge range of variation; typically involves similar types of data and similar questions
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- We can create a deterministic statistical machine for this area?
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## DSM Modules for Time Series Studies of Air Pollution and Health
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1. Check for outliers, high leverage, overdispersion
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2. Fill in missing data? No!
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3. Model selection: Estimate degrees of freedom to adjust for unmeasured confounders
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- Other aspects of model not as critical
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4. Multiple lag analysis
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5. Sensitivity analysis wrt
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- Unmeasured confounder adjustment
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- Influential points
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## Where to Go From Here?
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- One DSM is not enough, we need many!
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- Different problems warrant different approaches and expertise
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- A curated library of machines providing state-of-the-art analysis pipelines
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- A CRAN/CPAN/CTAN/... for data analysis
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- Or a "Cochrane Collaboration" for data analysis
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## A Curated Library of Data Analysis
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- Provide packages that encode data analysis pipelines for given problems, technologies, questions
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- Curated by experts knowledgeable in the field
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- Documentation / References given supporting module in the pipeline
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- Changes introduced after passing relevant benchmarks/unit tests
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## Summary
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- Reproducible research is important, but does not necessarily solve the critical question of whether a data analysis is trustworthy
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- Reproducible research focuses on the most "downstream" aspect of research documentation
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- Evidence-based data analysis would provide standardized best practices for given scientific areas and questions
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- Gives reviewers an important tool without dramatically increases the burden on them
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- More effort should be put into improving the quality of "upstream" aspects of scientific research
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