209 reputation
18
bio website confounding.net
location United States
age 29
visits member for 1 year, 10 months
seen Jun 13 at 3:57
stats profile views 8

Infectious disease epidemiology doctoral student with a focus on the intersection of mathematical models of disease transmission and observational study methods - how observational studies can be used to parameterize models, and how models can help develop targets for observational study. Has a known, documented fondness for enteric pathogens.

Fluent in SAS, good enough in R, barely hanging on in Python and C.

Also the author of Confounded by Confounding, a blog of public health, statistics, and life as a graduate student.

Currently trying to get the 'Public Health and Epidemiology' SE site off the ground: http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/34565/public-health-epidemiology

@EpiGrad


Aug
15
awarded  Yearling
Feb
13
answered Why does every SE site have its own Meta site?
Jan
2
answered Where can I ask questions on cloud computing?
Nov
6
awarded  Editor
Nov
6
revised Badge awarded for backing up facts
added 299 characters in body
Nov
6
comment Badge awarded for backing up facts
@StevenJeuris Again, you're assuming providing links is integral to the doing the research first. There are things which in a scientific context, are simply known by experts in the field. Science can - and does - have a great deal of comfort with this concept. It's why its not routine to cite general knowledge. It's not surprising that in a site full of experts, the answers to most questions are general knowledge to experts, and thus not in need of citations.
Nov
6
comment Badge awarded for backing up facts
@StevenJeuris Your provided links don't help. "Standing on the shoulders of giants" is a concept, not evidence. And it's just as easy to go about an argument from authority using linkspam as it is anything else.
Nov
6
awarded  Citizen Patrol
Nov
6
comment Badge awarded for backing up facts
@StevenJeuris That doesn't address meagar's assertion that not very post needs a link or two. You begin by asserting that a link or two will invariably "improve" a post. Ironically, you have not sourced or cited this assertion.
Nov
6
awarded  Critic
Nov
5
comment Badge awarded for backing up facts
@StevenJeuris One doesn't really contradict the other. It's entirely possible to have learned the foundation of one's knowledge from one's intellectual predecessors, yet have expertise of your own, techniques you have developed, etc. I ask experts because they are experts, not because they have a collection of citations for how they got there.
Nov
5
answered Badge awarded for backing up facts
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7
awarded  Teacher
Oct
7
answered Handling low-quality questions from low-rep users
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21
awarded  Autobiographer
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6
awarded  Supporter
Aug
16
awarded  Scholar
Aug
16
accepted Why not have Commitment Percent for Area 51 be an average, rather than a minimum?
Aug
15
awarded  Student
Aug
15
asked Why not have Commitment Percent for Area 51 be an average, rather than a minimum?