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In the puzzle found in Le Monde of this weekend, the mathematical object behind the silly story is defined as a pseudo-Spearman rank correlation test statistic,
where the difference between the ranks of the paired random variables
perm=sample(1:20) saple[t]=sum(abs(perm[1:10]-perm[11:20]))
which does not translate into a nice polynomial in
Another interesting probabilistic/combinatorial problem issued from an earlier Le Monde puzzle: given an urn with
Ps- The same math tribune in Le Monde coincidently advertises a book, Le Mythe Climatique, by Benoît Rittaud that adresses … climate change issues and the “statistical mistakes made by climatologists”. The interesting point (if any) is that Benoît Rittaud is a “mathematician not a statistician”, with a few papers in ergodic theory, but this advocated climatoskeptic nonetheless criticises the use of both statistical and simulation tools in climate modeling. (“Simulation has only been around for a few dozen years, a very short span in the history of sciences. The climate debate may be an opportunity to reassess the role of simulation in the scientific process.”)
Filed under: R, Statistics Tagged: climate change, climatosceptic, correlation, global warming, Le Monde, puzzle, R, Robin Ryder, Spearman rank test
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