graph paper diaries

because some of us need a few more lines to keep everything straight

Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Projects and Series
    • Book Recommendations
    • Intro to Internet Science
    • Pop Science
    • Reader Questions
    • 5 Things
    • Meta Science Papers
    • Fallacies I Just Made Up
    • For Teachers (or Students!)
  • GPD Lexicon
  • Get In Touch
Search

The Cynical Cartoonist Correlation Factor

October 21, 2016October 21, 2016 / bs king

I love a good creative metric:

dilbertplan

From the book “Results Without Authority” by Tom Kendrick.

In case you’re curious, this hangs on the wall behind my desk at work:

Happy Friday everyone!

Share this:

  • Email
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Heteroskedasticity
dilbert, key metrics

Post navigation

← What I’m Reading: October 2016
5 Interesting Examples of Self Reporting Bias →

Featured GPD Word of the Moment:

Misreprecitation: The act of directly citing a piece of work  to support your argument, when even a cursory reading of the original work shows it does not actually support your argument.

From the GPD Lexicon.

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Top Posts & Pages

  • 5 Examples of Bimodal Distributions (None of Which Are Human Height)
  • 6 Examples of Correlation/Causation Confusion
  • The Real Dunning-Kruger Graph
  • Vitamin D Deficiency: A Supplement Story
  • Visualizing Effect Sizes

Stats/Data/Science Blogs I Like

  • Flowing Data
  • Kaiser Fung/Numbers Rule Your World
  • Simply Statistics
  • Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference and Social Science
  • Stats Chat
  • William Briggs – Statistician to the Stars

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Archives

Blog at WordPress.com.
Cancel

 
Loading Comments...
Comment
    ×
    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
    %d bloggers like this: