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Make Bruins Great Again
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-------------------------------------- Joe See Porsche run. Run, Porsche, Run: `87 911 Carrera |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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The other explanation is that the results were measured to drive an outcome.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Checked out
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: On a beach
Posts: 10,127
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Increased testing = increased number of known cases.
It’s science (i.e., math). In any event, Kentucky is going to be on lockdown for a long time. Tennessee, South Carolina and Georgia have taken less restrictive policies and will be starting reopening very soon. We’ll see in 2-6 weeks who was right. Last edited by McLovin; 04-21-2020 at 06:05 PM.. |
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Checked out
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: On a beach
Posts: 10,127
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That’s looking forward.
Looking at current data: Deaths per million: KY: 35 SC: 25 GA: 75 TN: 23 |
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Still here
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Local government construction's still happening ... this is BART.
No social distancing rules apply it would appear. |
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Still here
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,167
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Good info pmax.
The State of Washington, in the spirit of shelter in place, released 300 prisoners early. But don't go fishing, they'll arrest you, doncha know.
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2˘ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee.
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Join Date: Apr 2002
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Go fishing if it's safe....I will and do.
But don't be stooopid... We, here in NC will continue the path that's been proposed by folks who know more about this than I do....or any of y'all for that matter. It's not about politics here.... |
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Registered
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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They had three problems. 1. Test accuracy. The manufacturer specs said 100% sensitivity (of positive samples, 0% are reported as false negative) and 98% specificity (of negative samples, 2% are reported as false positive). The manufacturer is a little Chinese company, the Chinese FDA didn't approve their test, China has now forbidden the export of the test, the specs are based on only 375-ish samples, so how much do you trust the specs? So Stanford tried to revalidate by running the test on 30 known positives and 30 known negatives. They got only 68% sensitivity (32% false negatives) and 100% specificity (0% false positives). But 60 samples is nowhere near enough to validate a test, especially if you don't have confidence in the manufacturing consistency etc. Well, Stanford ended up using a range of possible test accuracies ranging from 68% to 100% sensitivity and 98% to 100% specificity. That's one reason for their extremely wide range of inferred results. The problem is, the real value could easily be outside of that range entirely. 2. Sample non-representative. They advertised for participants on Facebook and those ads got passed around on FB and Nextdoor. The people who ended up coming to be tested were heavily skewed to female, white, living around Palo Alto, and FB users. Which is very different from Santa Clara's demographics. They tried to adjust, by, for example, taking the results in a zip code and scaling up/down to match the % of population in that zip code. They didn't adjust by age, income or other important criteria, don't know why. They didn't adjust by symptom history. Their adjustment took the raw rate from 1.5% to the inferred result of 2.5-4%. When your adjustment results in a 2-3X increase in the result, that tells you your metholodology is a problem. The "result" is mostly reflecting your adjustment decisions. 3. Sample self-selection bias. Who would be most likely to drive to the test location, especially if they live on the other side of Santa Clara county? Maybe people who had reason to think they'd been sick and wanted to find out? Self selection is a big problem in polling and it probably was here too. This study will not pass peer review - it is getting ripped apart by peers - but the Stanford docs quickly published an Op-Ed touting the study, trying to get the most publicity before their study is retracted or revised. There is really sloppy work going on, under the pressure and incentives created by covid - unfortunately this group of Stanford docs is an example. Note Stanford has developed its own in-house antibody test, that was not used in this study. The Stanford webpage announcing the new test explicitly notes it is not the same as the test used in the Santa Clara study. Hmm. TL-DR if your test has a 2% false positive rate, and you're testing for something present in 1-2% of the population, you're going to get junk answers.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? Last edited by jyl; 04-23-2020 at 07:11 AM.. |
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,167
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2˘ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee.
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Join Date: Apr 2002
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.Other than prison....no one is locked in their houses....anywhere in the USA. We're getting there with local efforts to produce masks and now local LabCorp has the tests becoming available. NC has never "totally shut down" per se, but folks are indeed being smart. Inaccurate polling for sure, but 85% on the local news say it's premature to stop what we're doing now. We'll get through this...it's just what we do... Got any 7s? Naw...go fishin' ...
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,167
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Actually, prisons are opening up and many people are mentally locked in their homes.
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2˘ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee.
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Brew Master
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Even more impressive is the fact that 100 protesters turned into 200+ cases just two days after the protest! It's a coronavirus miracle!
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Nick |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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There will be no reopening. Those of us in states whose governors expect to use this crisis for political gain will keep us imprisoned in our homes, without trial or due process, at least through the election. We are now subjects who must seek permission from our lords before undertaking any action.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." Last edited by legion; 04-23-2020 at 12:05 PM.. |
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Mount Airy, MD
Posts: 4,299
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^^^^
Me thinks you have been off to see Tabs...
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1967 912 with centerlocks… 10 years and still in pieces! |
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Information Overloader
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: NW Lower Michigan
Posts: 29,445
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They'll have to change it from quarantine to curfew. How else are they gonna control the seething masses?
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Join Date: Apr 2002
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AutoBahned
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anybody know the DNS server for legion?
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