In today's Science Times, the New York Times' weekly science section, John Tierney writes of updating the formula he and statistician Garth Sundem developed to predict the likely lifespan of celebrity marriages. They have now crunched five years of data, and refined the measure to take account of mentions in the New York Times relative to mentions in The National Enquirer. They also include months of dating before marriage, relative ages of the couple, and something they call the image (how many images of the woman scantily clad appear on the web).
This article is perhaps not as sublime as Marta Siberio's guest post yesterday about strategic planning, but it is far from preposterous. The descriptions are clear, the results defensible. Whether finding the answer is worth taking the trouble is another question - one that's addressed in the NY Times comments.
Tuesday
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2012
(177)
-
▼
March
(11)
- College admissions, and admissions yields
- Gas Prices
- Visualizing Health Care Spending, from The Atlanti...
- Guest Blogger Marta Siberio on Strategic Planning:...
- Consider the complications
- Global warming in a flash
- Statistics, Predictions, and Celebrity Marriages
- Guest blogger Marta Siberio on Strategic Planning:...
- Thinking big about transportation in New York City
- Super Tuesday results update
- How to be a better listener
-
▼
March
(11)
Popular Posts
-
Here's a link to a series of charts The Atlantic.com has put together titled "10 Ways to Visualize How Americans Spend Money on He...
-
It's still in beta, and not all the data are loaded yet, but even so the website Mapping Gothic France , put together by art historians ...
-
I've mentioned Edward Tufte, the statistician and political scientist before. Now I've read Tufte's 2003 essay "The Cog...
-
Like many other people, I am constantly on the lookout for useful organizing tools. Here are a couple to ponder, and play with, over the T...
-
"Rethinking a Lot: The Culture and Design of Parking," Eran Ben-Joseph's unexpectedly lyrical ode to the humble parking lot, d...
No comments:
Post a Comment