Statistically Controlling for Confounding Constructs Is Harder than You Think
Bias in Relative Odds Estimation owing to Imprecise Measurement of Correlated Exposures
How Independent Are ‘Independent’ Effects? Relative Risk Estimation When Correlated Exposures Are Measured Imprecisely
Smoking As ‘Independent’ Risk Factor for Suicide: Illustration of an Artifact from Observational Epidemiology?
Observational versus Randomized Trial Evidence
2004-lawlor.pdf
Clustered Environments and Randomized Genes: A Fundamental Distinction between Conventional and Genetic Epidemiology
The Impact of Residual and Unmeasured Confounding in Epidemiologic Studies: A Simulation Study
https://www.dcscience.net/Davey-Smith-2011.pdf
Genetic sensitivity analysis: Adjusting for genetic confounding in epidemiological associations
Everything Is Correlated
Top 10 Replicated Findings From Behavioral Genetics § #7: The Environment Is Genetic
How Often Does Correlation=Causality?
Maternal Judgments of Child Numeracy and Reading Ability Predict Gains in Academic Achievement and Interest
Impossibly Hungry Judges
Discrimination and Anxiety: Using Multiple Polygenic Scores to Control for Genetic Liability
Genetic Associations with Mathematics Tracking and Persistence in Secondary School
It’s All about the Parents: Inequality Transmission across Three Generations in Sweden
The Social and Genetic Inheritance of Educational Attainment: Genes, Parental Education, and Educational Expansion
The propensity for aggressive behavior and lifetime incarceration risk: A test for gene-environment interaction (G × E) using whole-genome data
The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence while controlling for genetic differences in cognition and socioeconomic background
A genetically informed Registered Report on adverse childhood experiences and mental health
Methods of Meta-Analysis: Correcting Error and Bias in Research Findings
What matters more for entrepreneurship success? A meta-analysis comparing general mental ability and emotional intelligence in entrepreneurial settings
Evaluating the Effect of Inadequately Measured Variables in Partial Correlation Analysis
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746292.pdf
Genius Revisited Revisited
SMPY Bibliography
To Understand Regression from Parent to Offspring, Think Statistically
Regression Fallacies in the Matched Groups Experiment
Control of Spurious Association and the Reliability of the Controlled Variable
Nuisance Variables and the Ex Post Facto Design
Statistical Method
Interpretation of Educational Measurements
Fundamentals Of Statistics
Interpreting regression toward the mean in developmental research
Lord’s paradox in a continuous setting and a regression artifact in numerical cognition research
Allocation to groups: Examples of Lord’s paradox
The Relevance of Group Membership for Personnel Selection: A Demonstration Using Bayes’ Theorem
Kelley’s Paradox
Three Statistical Paradoxes in the Interpretation of Group Differences: Illustrated with Medical School Admission and Licensing Data
Measurement Error, Regression to the Mean, and Group Differences
What happens after enrollment? An analysis of the time path of racial differences in GPA and major choice
The Optimizer’s Curse: Skepticism and Postdecision Surprise in Decision Analysis
Predicting the Next Big Thing: Success as a Signal of Poor Judgment
Searching for the Backfire Effect: Measurement and Design Considerations
Placebo Effects Are Weak: Regression to the Mean Is the Main Reason Ineffective Treatments Appear to Work
Powerless Placebos
Placebo interventions for all clinical conditions
When Superstars Flop: Public Status and Choking Under Pressure in International Soccer Penalty Shootouts
A Primer on Regression Artifacts
The Replication Crisis: Flaws in Mainstream Science
Statistical correction of the Winner’s Curse explains replication variability in quantitative trait genome-wide association studies
Methods for Studying Coincidences § Pg9
Calculating The Gaussian Expected Maximum § Probability of Bivariate Maximum
Stein’s Paradox in Statistics: The Best Guess about the Future Is Usually Obtained by Computing the Average of past Events. Stein’s Paradox Defines Circumstances in Which There Are Estimators Better Than the Arithmetic Average
The 1988 Neyman Memorial Lecture: A Galtonian Perspective on Shrinkage Estimators