6 Matching Annotations
- Jan 2022
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hackmd.io hackmd.io
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Argument quality and fallacies. (n.d.). HackMD. Retrieved January 17, 2022, from https://hackmd.io/@scibehC19vax/argumentquality
Tags
- arguments
- self-contradiction
- ignorance
- norms
- vaccine data
- statistical fallacies
- factual error
- vaccine hesitancy
- standards
- slippery slope
- claim
- bias
- lang:en
- evidence
- inconsistency
- source reliability
- argument quality
- is:article
- Simpson's paradox
- causation
- fallacies
- vaccination debate
- ad hominem argument
Annotators
URL
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- Mar 2021
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www.sitepoint.com www.sitepoint.com
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JavaScript needs to fly from its comfy nest, and learn to survive on its own, on equal terms with other languages and run-times. It’s time to grow up, kid.
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If JavaScript were detached from the client and server platforms, the pressure of being a monoculture would be lifted — the next iteration of the JavaScript language or run-time would no longer have to please every developer in the world, but instead could focus on pleasing a much smaller audience of developers who love JavaScript and thrive with it, while enabling others to move to alternative languages or run-times.
Tags
- level playing field
- programming languages: choosing the best language for the job
- runtime environment
- avoid giving partiality/advantage/bias to any specific option
- good idea
- separation of concerns
- neutral/unbiased/agnostic
- programming languages
- software freedom
- competition in open-source software
- neutral ground
- JavaScript: as a process VM
Annotators
URL
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- Jul 2020
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osf.io osf.io
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Burgess, M. G., Langendorf, R. E., Ippolito, T., & Pielke, R. (2020). Optimistically biased economic growth forecasts and negatively skewed annual variation [Preprint]. SocArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/vndqr
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- Jun 2020
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bmcmedresmethodol.biomedcentral.com bmcmedresmethodol.biomedcentral.com
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Boulesteix, A., Strobl, C. Optimal classifier selection and negative bias in error rate estimation: an empirical study on high-dimensional prediction. BMC Med Res Methodol 9, 85 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-9-85
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- Jun 2017
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opentextbc.ca opentextbc.ca
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Expert communicators may sometimes be perceived as trustworthy because they know a lot about the product they are selling.
Brain Games persuasion experiment: A fake sales person utilizes the halo effect, expert bias, and artificial scarcity to to promote a worthless product to consumers.
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