Bipolar Disorder, Digital Phenotyping, Multimodal Learning, Face/Voice/Phone, Mood Classification, Relapse Prediction, T-SNE, Ablation Share and Cite: de Filippis, R. and Al Foysal, A. (2025) ...
Introduction Sleep problems are an escalating global health concern, with prevalence estimates ranging from 8.3% to 45%. Physicians are disproportionately affected, with rates around 44% compared with ...
This article presents a tutorial on mixture-process experiments and a case study of a chemical compound used in the delay mechanism for starting a rocket engine. The compound consists in a ...
This campus-based module is led by Stephen Walters. It runs in the Autumn semester and is worth 15 credits. This module introduces students to the basic concepts and techniques of medical statistics, ...
OF all the works a man may set himself to write, the most difficult must surely be an elementary text-book on statistics. The writer of a text-book on almost any scientific subject has to face the ...
The module will introduce students to basic concepts and techniques such as hypothesis testing and confidence interval estimation in statistics. Students will learn some simple statistical methods and ...
This is an introductory course on statistics and how it can help us answer the kind of questions that arise when we want to better understand the world. We will use real-world examples from the social ...
This guidance note discusses how to report statistics and data, while avoiding some of the pitfalls. Advice in assessing the creditability of data-based stories; statistical checking or how to report ...
Peter Gratton, Ph.D., is a New Orleans-based editor and professor with over 20 years of experience in investing, risk management, and public policy. Peter began covering markets at Multex (Reuters) ...
When Motorola introduced its first mobile phone in 1984, the company hoped for a buying frenzy. But even the best marketers couldn’t have predicted the success of mobile phones. Today, mobile phones ...
MR. UDNY YULE'S “Introduction” was the first book on statistics that came into my hands. This was about 1916. I liked it then and learned a lot from it. I like it even more now in its eleventh edition ...
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