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Michael Hardy
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Statistics applied to microarray data in biology. And Bernd Sturmfels and his students have been applying algebraic geometry to this. He wrote a book titled Algebraic statistics for computational biology. Biology is a field that will explode in coming decades. Advances in that field will probably capture the public imagination the way physics did in the 20th century. The next Einstein could be a biologist.

(Does any of the empirical data used in any research papers published in that field have any validity? That's something that could bear inspection. People put vast numbers of large data sets on the internet, and others base research papers on them. But before they do that they transform raw numbers by, for example, raising everything to the power 3/2. If you later ask them specifically how they transformed it, they may be blindsided by the question and think you're making a strange unusual request that they'd never have expected in a million years. People don't normally ask such weird things. At least such has been my impression.)

Statistics applied to microarray data in biology. And Bernd Sturmfels and his students have been applying algebraic geometry to this. He wrote a book titled Algebraic statistics for computational biology. Biology is a field that will explode in coming decades. Advances in that field will probably capture the public imagination the way physics did in the 20th century. The next Einstein could be a biologist.

(Does any of the data used in any research papers published in that field have any validity? That's something that could bear inspection. People put vast numbers of large data sets on the internet, and others base research papers on them. But before they do that they transform raw numbers by, for example, raising everything to the power 3/2. If you later ask them specifically how they transformed it, they may be blindsided by the question and think you're making a strange unusual request that they'd never have expected in a million years. People don't normally ask such weird things. At least such has been my impression.)

Statistics applied to microarray data in biology. And Bernd Sturmfels and his students have been applying algebraic geometry to this. He wrote a book titled Algebraic statistics for computational biology. Biology is a field that will explode in coming decades. Advances in that field will probably capture the public imagination the way physics did in the 20th century. The next Einstein could be a biologist.

(Does any of the empirical data used in any research papers published in that field have any validity? That's something that could bear inspection. People put vast numbers of large data sets on the internet, and others base research papers on them. But before they do that they transform raw numbers by, for example, raising everything to the power 3/2. If you later ask them specifically how they transformed it, they may be blindsided by the question and think you're making a strange unusual request that they'd never have expected in a million years. People don't normally ask such weird things. At least such has been my impression.)

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Michael Hardy
  • 1
  • 12
  • 85
  • 126

Statistics applied to microarray data in biology. And Bernd Sturmfels and his students have been applying algebraic geometry to this. He wrote a book titled Algebraic statistics for computational biology. Biology is a field that will explode in coming decades. Advances in that field will probably capture the public imagination the way physics did in the 20th century. The next Einstein could be a biologist.

(Does any of the data used in any research papers published in that field have any validity? That's something that could bear inspection. People put vast numbers of large data sets on the internet, and others base research papers on them. But before they do that they transform raw numbers by, for example, raising everything to the power 3/2. If you later ask them specifically how they transformed it, they may be blindsided by the question and think you're making a strange unusual request that they'd never have expected in a million years. People don't normally ask such weird things. At least such has been my impression.)