In some fields, researchers who end up with time series of two variables of interest (X and Y) like to analyze (reciprocal) lagged effects between them. Does X affect Y at a later point in time, and does Y affect X at a later point in time? These questions are usually addressed with some sort of pan| The 100% CI
Summer in Berlin – the perfect time and place to explore the city, take a walk in the Görli, go skinny dipping in the Spree, attend an overcrowded, overheated conference symposium on cross-lagged panel models (#noAircon). So that’s what I did three weeks ago at the European Conference on Personality| The 100% CI
Content warning: half-assed philosophy of science Part I: Causal Inference I am not very keen to join the stats wars, but if I had to join, I would rally under the banner of House Cause. That is the one framework I’d champion in a (randomised controlled) trial-by-combat if necessary: Autho| The 100% CI