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Bill Johnston's avatar

Thanks, looking forward to it! For many years I’ve been a fan of Dr. Nortin Hadler, a former director of the U. of North Carolina’s School of Medicine and “a self-described refutationist (whose goal is) to educate the lay reader on how to avoid dubious and potentially harmful medical interventions…”. I discovered his books ‘The Last Well Person’ and ‘Rethinking Aging’ years ago, and recommend them to friends who are confused by the ‘standard wisdom’ offered by the American health care system. Here’s some background: https://www.med.unc.edu/medicine/rheumatology-allergy-immunology/people/nortin-m-hadler/

David Menéndez Hurtado's avatar

One thing I like to tell my students (and anyone willing to listen) is that metrics are perspectives on the data. They are by nature lossy, but by combining many different ones, and seeing where they agree and disagree we can build a better insight.

Also, to always compare with a baseline (defined as the simplest model that works), specially when working with very unbalanced datasets. It helps identifying overly optimistic metrics.

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