@mikolaj_pawlak@agingdoc1@Berci One is the richest man on Earth and the other a Noble prize winner, neither expected how hard it would be to navigate the red tape.
@swdhldr He's a quantitative equity analyst. How exactly was he assessing risk without Bayesian methods, regression models, or some other quantitative framework?
I thought pre-meds were bad when I was in undergrad, the final form is way worse. Dudes think bayesian analysis is the most complex process in the universe. I pity my biomedical engineering homies dealing with them.
@proales@AgustinLebron3 Sure you have some that are not proficient in science and tech but the amount of times I saw "techbros cant do stats" is also laughable.
@fuulu92@cvmonakow Well, a small nuclear reactors, fusion reactors, bioreactors with new materials would get me hyped haha but if a notable company went from Image generation to fusion reactors it would for sure make massive headlines.
@fuulu92@cvmonakow They are regulated, of course, but techbros work there too, which means physicians aren't the only ones working with life-threatening problems. If I designed a plant with a reactor system with defects leading to a runaway reaction, this would lead to 100s of casualties.
@fuulu92@cvmonakow Granted it is illegal to larp as a physician, and our industry isn't as credentialist, so have more variance in terms of competence and breadth of skills. CS, EE, Stat, Physic, Math and other engineering grads are very proficient in stats and exceed the average md in stats.
Techbro who hasn’t the slightest idea what Bayesian analysis is, calling docs “borderline innumerate”. Lmao.
Things I would bet Jeffrey has never done:
1. Interpreted one imaging study
2. Clinically correlated a finding from that study
3. Decided a course of action for a patient based on a finding
I would like imaging to be faster and cheaper, it’s better for everyone. Thinking that indiscriminate use of testing and “more data is always better” is for the smoothest of brains.