teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2024 4:03 pm
brimstoneSalad wrote:You could control for those, or look at older ones.
So, do you think that Dubravka Ivšić is right to say that I would probably get a much larger p-value if I ignore the river names that have obvious Slavic etymologies (by which she means Krapina, Kravarščica and presumably Krbavica), and that that invalidates my conclusions?
Teo, I'm not an expert in linguistics nor even a novice, I'm only speaking generally from a perspective of informatics and statistics. I can't speak to specific words or assess the obviousness of anything with regards to its linguistic roots.
However, if you're asking if any randomly selected expert in linguistics is probably right with regards to a criticism of your work, the answer is yes, probably. Your work is probably wrong. I think even I have established that just based on your methodology without respect to specific analysis of your specific assessments (which I can not do).
teo123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:06 am
Don't you think the same response applies, if not much more so, to the studies supposedly showing that lockdowns work?
I'm not going to go read those studies or humor conspiracy theories. That's too big of a rabbit hole. It's far more complicated than what you're doing, and I don't think an analogy is appropriate.
First, perfect lockdowns must work to eliminate a virus -- if you isolate all infected persons until they are no longer contagious, the virus is gone.
Whether lockdowns are successful in practice to slow viral outbreak (which was the point of them, to prevent hospitals from being overloaded) depends on how well they're followed by the people voluntarily locking down.
In practice it's probably nearly impossible to study the efficacy of various policies due to the confounding variables, but only nearly; you can get some sense of the probability of different policies having a better effect, and that can inform some controlled studies.
This is very different from what you're trying to look at, which is a post hoc association to find if there's a pattern at all rather than assessing a known mechanism to see if it's confounded in practice.
Stricter policies may be more effective, or less effective because people may be more likely to disregard them as too strict and impossible to follow so "why bother". It's a question of psychology and sociology. The data analysis on these is probably a nightmare. Then you need to compare them against other effects like depression and suicide that lockdowns could theoretically cause
teo123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:06 amDon't you think that, by chance alone, you will find a statistically significant correlation between some measure of lockdown strigency and some measure of the success if you search for it?
It's a bad comparison Teo.
But also no, not necessarily. The issue here in evaluating lockdowns is confounding human variables and adjustment for environment, not a random mistaken signal out of a huge pool of possible conjectures.
A better analogy would be something like looking at the success of lockdowns based on random variables, not known confounders -- like if you ad hoc hypothesized after looking at the data that lockdowns were most successful with people who have last names with even numbers of syllables including two ts, and then that was your conclusion. That would be stupid and nobody is doing that.
I don't want to discourage you from research Teo, but I'm getting the impression that despite your interest in linguistics, it may not be a good field for you.
You would be better off entering a field of harder science and limiting your research to actual experiments rather than ad hoc data analysis -- the latter of which will fuel your paranoid false pattern finding tendencies. I don't think this kind of linguistic research is compatible with or beneficial to your psychological issues. I would say talk to your therapist about it, but your therapist probably doesn't understand scientific methodology so probably would not be able to give sound advice on the topic. Just please consider shifting into hard science, you're still very early in your academic career and I don't think linguistics is healthy for you.
You could make some real contributions in the hard sciences and have a very valuable and successful career. I think if you continue in linguistics you'll be chasing phantoms and never really grasp the problem with it.