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Keeping ourselves honest when we work with observational healthcare data

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Manage episode 259287895 series 74115
Content provided by Ben Jaffe and Katie Malone, Ben Jaffe, and Katie Malone. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Jaffe and Katie Malone, Ben Jaffe, and Katie Malone or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The abundance of data in healthcare, and the value we could capture from structuring and analyzing that data, is a huge opportunity. It also presents huge challenges. One of the biggest challenges is how, exactly, to do that structuring and analysis—data scientists working with this data have hundreds or thousands of small, and sometimes large, decisions to make in their day-to-day analysis work. What data should they include in their studies? What method should they use to analyze it? What hyperparameter settings should they explore, and how should they pick a value for their hyperparameters? The thing that’s really difficult here is that, depending on which path they choose among many reasonable options, a data scientist can get really different answers to the underlying question, which makes you wonder how to conclude anything with certainty at all. The paper for this week’s episode performs a systematic study of many, many different permutations of the questions above on a set of benchmark datasets where the “right” answers are known. Which strategies are most likely to yield the “right” answers? That’s the whole topic of discussion. Relevant links: https://hdsr.mitpress.mit.edu/pub/fxz7kr65
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293 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 259287895 series 74115
Content provided by Ben Jaffe and Katie Malone, Ben Jaffe, and Katie Malone. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Jaffe and Katie Malone, Ben Jaffe, and Katie Malone or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The abundance of data in healthcare, and the value we could capture from structuring and analyzing that data, is a huge opportunity. It also presents huge challenges. One of the biggest challenges is how, exactly, to do that structuring and analysis—data scientists working with this data have hundreds or thousands of small, and sometimes large, decisions to make in their day-to-day analysis work. What data should they include in their studies? What method should they use to analyze it? What hyperparameter settings should they explore, and how should they pick a value for their hyperparameters? The thing that’s really difficult here is that, depending on which path they choose among many reasonable options, a data scientist can get really different answers to the underlying question, which makes you wonder how to conclude anything with certainty at all. The paper for this week’s episode performs a systematic study of many, many different permutations of the questions above on a set of benchmark datasets where the “right” answers are known. Which strategies are most likely to yield the “right” answers? That’s the whole topic of discussion. Relevant links: https://hdsr.mitpress.mit.edu/pub/fxz7kr65
  continue reading

293 episodes

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