Ruben C. Arslan (@rubenarslan) 's Twitter Profile
Ruben C. Arslan

@rubenarslan

Bayescurious evidence enthusiast @the100ci & @error_reviews. Topics: evolution, ovulation, mutation, personality, sexuality, R, open science & source tools.

ID: 1320475297

linkhttps://rubenarslan.github.io calendar_today01-04-2013 14:34:01

11,11K Tweet

4,4K Followers

1,1K Following

Science Banana (@literalbanana) 's Twitter Profile Photo

study 1 of the infamous "sign at the top" study claims to test how much signing at the top or bottom of a form affects cheating at a math task...but apparently the subjects didn't even see the form they signed until AFTER the cheating task??

study 1 of the infamous "sign at the top" study claims to test how much signing at the top or bottom of a form affects cheating at a math task...but apparently the subjects didn't even see the form they signed until AFTER the cheating task??
Will (@evolving_moloch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Interesting new paper showing what I’ve been complaining about for years: the ‘gender-equality paradox’ is confounded by spatial and cultural autocorrelation: “gender differences covary more strongly with cultural regions and data quality than gender equality”.

Interesting new paper showing what I’ve been complaining about for years: the ‘gender-equality paradox’ is confounded by spatial and cultural autocorrelation: “gender differences covary more strongly with cultural regions and data quality than gender equality”.
Will (@evolving_moloch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I think there are some broader implications for evolutionary psychology here. As I try and emphasize all the time now, EP is an important and necessary field that helps shed light on human nature. There is lots of good work in it, plenty of people who have promoted the ‘gender

Alex Strudwick Young (@alextisyoung) 's Twitter Profile Photo

These results are inconsistent with similar previous analyses such as this from our education GWAS paper. For IQ, the PGS effect shrunk to 84% as large (S.E. 3.3%) within-family. We used a much larger sample than this study, meta-analysing across UK Biobank, Swedish Twin

These results are inconsistent with similar previous analyses such as this from our education GWAS paper. For IQ, the PGS effect shrunk to 84% as large (S.E. 3.3%) within-family. We used a much larger sample than this study, meta-analysing across UK Biobank, Swedish Twin
Ruben C. Arslan (@rubenarslan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Astral Codex Ten goes deep on the missing heritability question and recent findings on educational attainment astralcodexten.com/p/missing-heri…

genemille (@ifyouseefebri) 's Twitter Profile Photo

i'm starting to think Scott has been quitely transitioning into becoming a comedian here. i've never felt so sinful finding myself laugh in tears 😂

i'm starting to think Scott has been quitely transitioning into becoming a comedian here. i've never felt so sinful finding myself laugh in tears 😂
Alex Strudwick Young (@alextisyoung) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I helped Scott Alexander with this post. At least with respect to some traits (e.g. education, bmi), we are in an epistemic crisis about their heritability. We have multiple strong methods - twin studies, RDR, sibling, GREML-WGS - that are not converging on a consensus reality.

I helped <a href="/slatestarcodex/">Scott Alexander</a> with this post. At least with respect to some traits (e.g. education, bmi), we are in an epistemic crisis about their heritability. We have multiple strong methods - twin studies, RDR, sibling, GREML-WGS - that are not converging on a consensus reality.
Science Banana (@literalbanana) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm reading Robert Sapolsky's Determined: Life Without Free Will as a mild form of self harm and here are two perfect pages - ego depletion, surgeon's birthdays, Francesca Gino/Dan Ariely study, implicit bias, hungry judges - all on the same page!!!

I'm reading Robert Sapolsky's Determined: Life Without Free Will as a mild form of self harm and here are two perfect pages - ego depletion, surgeon's birthdays, Francesca Gino/Dan Ariely study, implicit bias, hungry judges - all on the same page!!!