Workbook for Volume 1 – Part V: Section #4.10: Template for Reading Research Papers (Statistical Methods )
For new readers, please read the “Pinned Post” at the top of this Substack’s Home Page, and titled Why Use Public Peer-Review to Write a Book? - “See for Yourself”.
For returning readers & subscribers, this post presents the revised version of: Volume 1 – Part V: Section #4.10: Template for Reading Research Papers (Statistical Methods )
Summary:
After the First Step for in the process for reading research papers (see Volume - Part V: Section #4.2: One-Page Summary), continue with the Second Step by taking notes for all levels of analysis in the Template, and for all parts of the paper. This matrix comes from Volume 1 – Part V: The Template for Reading Research Papers, and provides a framework to organize questions about the statistical methods used by the author of the paper:
See pdf below:
“CTRI by Francois Gadenne” writes a book in three volumes, published at the rate of one two-pages section per day on Substack for public peer-review. The book connects the dots of life-enhancing practices for the next generation, free of controlling algorithms, based on the lifetime experience of a retirement age entrepreneur, & continuously updated with insights from reading Wealth, Health, & Statistics (i.e. AI/ML/LLM) research papers on behalf of large companies as the co-founder of CTRI.