Hey—here’s the title of my talk for this year’s New York R conference

Toward a Fuller Integration of Graphics in Statistical Analysis

The talk will be 20 Apr 2018 at 1:25pm.

And here are some things to read ahead of time, if you’re interested:

[2003] A Bayesian formulation of exploratory data analysis and goodness-of-fit testing. {\em International Statistical Review} {\bf 71}, 369–382.

[2004] Exploratory data analysis for complex models (with discussion). {\em Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics} {\bf 13}, 755–779.

[2008] Diagnostics for multivariate imputations. {\em Applied Statistics} {\bf 57}, 273–291.

[2014] When do stories work? Evidence and illustration in the social sciences. {\em Sociological Methods and Research} {\bf 43}, 547–570.

[2016] Graphical visualization of polling results. In {\em Oxford Handbook on Polling and Polling Methods}, ed.\ Lonna Atkeson and Michael Alvarez.

[unpublished] Visualization in Bayesian workflow.

 

9 thoughts on “Hey—here’s the title of my talk for this year’s New York R conference

  1. Usually I don’t go for such nitpicking but this one bothers me for some reason. It at once sounds like it has some extremely technical meaning and is nonsense slang. The term “Fuller Integration” sounds like the name for a type of integration named after an obscure person/town/process/etc, when you mean “More Complete Integration”. Is “fuller” even a word in the sense you are using it? If something is full, that means it has reached max capacity.

    On looking it up it seemed that “Fuller Integration” was the name for something relating to experimental theology (not sure what that is, but I wonder if they use NHST?).

  2. Anon:

    What I meant by the title is that graphics are currently somewhat integrated into statistical analysis, and I want this integration to be closer to full.

    Maybe I can just change the title to, Integration of Graphics in Statistical Analysis.

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