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| Research bulletin: understanding the crime fall |
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MSc Open Evening - 14 Scholarships |
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MASTER CLASSES FOR ALL |
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Problem solving, analysis and implementing responses Next date TBC |
ANALYST COURSES |
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Neighbourhood Analysis 21 May 2013 |
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Predictive Mapping *NEW* 23 May 2013 |
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Advanced Hotspot Analysis 2 July 2013 |
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Strategic Assessments 4 July 2013 |
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COURSE IS FULL! 8-19 July 2013 |
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Crime Analysis 23-26 September 2013 |
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Understanding Hotspots 8 October 2013 |
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Hypothesis Testing Analysis Next date TBC |
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Statistical Causality: Conceptions, Connexions, Confusions, Contentions
| Date: | Friday, April 21, 2006 | |
| Time: | 14:30 | |
| Link: | http://www.usyd.edu.au/time/conferences/CPDcon.htm#dawid |
| Location: | Centre for TIme, Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia | |
| Contact Name: | Huw Price | |
| Contact Phone: | +61 (0) 2 9351 4057 |
Invited Lecture, Causation, Probability and Decision
Conference.
Modern statistical approaches to causal inference are based on a variety
of distinct foundations, ingredients, assumptions and methods. These
involve differing conceptions of the effects of interventions, or of
stable relationships across regimes; disagreement over the roles of
hypothetical and counterfactual outcomes; and varying semantics and uses
for algebraic, graphical and other representations. There does however
seem to be fairly broad agreement that causal inference requires
significant modifications and extensions to standard statistical
machinery. I shall argue that this is mistaken, and that the power of
existing statistical and decision-theoretic tools to address causal
issues is much greater than is commonly allowed.
Speaker
| Name: | Professor Philip Dawid | |
| Affiliation: | University College London | |
| Homepage: | http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/%7Eucak06d/ | |
| Biography |
Philip Dawid is Professor of
Statistics at Cambridge University, having been Pearson Professor of
Statistics at University College London from 1989 to 2007. He is
Chartered Statistician and Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society,
which has awarded him Guy Medals in Bronze and Silver; elected Fellow of
the Institute of Mathematical Statistics; elected Member of the
International Statistical Institute; and a Member of the Organising
Committee for the Valencia International Meetings on Bayesian
Statistics. He has served as Editor of the Journal of the Royal
Statistical Society (Series B) and of Biometrika, and is currently an
Editor of Bayesian Analysis. He was President of the International
Society for Bayesian Analysis for the year 2000.
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