This document summarizes Hadley Wickham's presentation on professional development. It discusses setting up for a poster presentation, learning tools like typing and software, joining mailing lists, recommended books, journals, developing communication skills through writing, speaking, and using email effectively. Key aspects of using email effectively included regularly emptying your inbox, providing minimal responses, deleting emails, using filters, and scheduling times to respond to emails in batches.
Overview of how/why to reshape data in R from "wide" (spreadsheet-like) to "long" (database-like) and back.
Focuses on Hadley Wickham's reshape2 package and uses state population data from the 2010 U.S. Census. Also demonstrates use of dcast() to replace table(), etc. to generate crosstabs from a sample market research consumer survey.
Presented at the April 2011 meeting of the Greater Boston useR Group.
The Network Society - Exploring Digital CulturesNicola Giusto
Nicola Giusto, Ma in Digital Communication and Cultures
The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
Ontological and political implications of Network Theory
It is self-evident how information and communications technologies play a central role in social and cultural transformations in many universes: media, language, social actors, politics and public administration, thought and space.
This paper attempts to clarify the present time, analyzing social network paradigm and its relation with the so called digital culture from a critical prospective.
In particular, it preliminary stresses the relationship between any kind of network, power, knowledge and technology (Heidegger, Foucault), then it presents a critical analysis of the most recent studies and ideas (SNT, SNA, the Small world theory, the Network effect, Innovation, Information cascade and logic of diffusion). In part III, two different kinds of realist social ontology are presented and evaluated (Latour’s work and DeLanda’s Assemblage theory) in the attempt to move towards a new philosophy of relation.
The last part explores social and political implications of living embodied in a complex global social network where governance is everyday more managed by technical protocols, apparatus and machines (Deleuze, Castells, Agamben, Galloway).
More information on:
http://www.culturedigitali.org
http://www.lefthandedstudio.com
Overview of how/why to reshape data in R from "wide" (spreadsheet-like) to "long" (database-like) and back.
Focuses on Hadley Wickham's reshape2 package and uses state population data from the 2010 U.S. Census. Also demonstrates use of dcast() to replace table(), etc. to generate crosstabs from a sample market research consumer survey.
Presented at the April 2011 meeting of the Greater Boston useR Group.
The Network Society - Exploring Digital CulturesNicola Giusto
Nicola Giusto, Ma in Digital Communication and Cultures
The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
Ontological and political implications of Network Theory
It is self-evident how information and communications technologies play a central role in social and cultural transformations in many universes: media, language, social actors, politics and public administration, thought and space.
This paper attempts to clarify the present time, analyzing social network paradigm and its relation with the so called digital culture from a critical prospective.
In particular, it preliminary stresses the relationship between any kind of network, power, knowledge and technology (Heidegger, Foucault), then it presents a critical analysis of the most recent studies and ideas (SNT, SNA, the Small world theory, the Network effect, Innovation, Information cascade and logic of diffusion). In part III, two different kinds of realist social ontology are presented and evaluated (Latour’s work and DeLanda’s Assemblage theory) in the attempt to move towards a new philosophy of relation.
The last part explores social and political implications of living embodied in a complex global social network where governance is everyday more managed by technical protocols, apparatus and machines (Deleuze, Castells, Agamben, Galloway).
More information on:
http://www.culturedigitali.org
http://www.lefthandedstudio.com
7. Learn your tools
• Touch typing
• Text editor
• Command line
• Caffeine
• R
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
8. Mailing list
Sign up to R-help: https://stat.ethz.ch/
mailman/listinfo/r-help
Make sure to set up filters
Skim interesting subjects and read them
Don’t be afraid to post
(use a pseudonym if necessary)
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
9. Books
R in a nutshell, Joseph Adler.
http://amzn.com/059680170X
Data manipulation with R, Phil Spector.
http://amzn.com/0387747303
Software for Data Analysis: Programming
with R, John Chambers.
http://amzn.com/0387759352
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
10. Books
Regression Modeling Strategies, Frank Harrell.
http://amzn.com/0387952322
Mixed-Effects Models in S and S-PLUS, Jose
Pinheiro and Douglas Bates.
http://amzn.com/1441903178 and http://lme4.r-
forge.r-project.org/book/
Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/
Hierarchical Models, Andrew Gelman and
Jennifer Hill. http://amzn.com/052168689X
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
11. Journals
The R Journal,
http://journal.r-project.org/
The Journal of Statistical Software,
http://www.jstatsoft.org/
Statistical computing and graphics
newsletter, http://stat-computing.org/
newsletter/
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
13. Professional
development
The aspects of being a statistician, apart
from knowing statistics.
Principally communication: written,
spoken, visual and electronic.
Take every opportunity you can to
practice these skills.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
15. Written
Particularly important if you want to be an
academic, or if you‘re PhD student, or want
to become one.
“Style: Toward Clarity and Grace” –
http://amzn.com/0226899152
Sign up for the thesis writing workshops
when they come around.
Develop a regular habit.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
16. My habit
• Roll out of bed at 7am
• Make tea
• Write for an hour
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
17. Spoken
Seize every opportunity to practice.
Make use of Tracy Volz - tmvolz@rice.edu.
She is a fantastic resource - if you had to
pay for her, you wouldn’t be able to afford
it.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
24. http://www.43folders.com/izero
Merlin Mann
There is no way you will ever be able to respond to — let alone read in
exquisite detail — every email you ever receive for the rest of your life. If
you take issue with this, just wait six months, because, believe me, we’re
all getting a lot more email (and other sundry demands on our attention)
every day. What seems like a doddle today is going to get progressively
more difficult — even insurmountable — unless you put a realistic system
in place now.
Inbox Zero
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
25. Your time is priceless
(and wildly limited)
You need an agnostic system for
dealing with mail that isn’t based on
nonces, exceptions, and guilt.
[The] ultimate goal is for you to spend
less time playing with your email and
more time doing stuff.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
26. Key concepts
Regularly empty your inbox
Minimal response
Delete, delete, delete
Filters
Email dashes
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
27. Inbox Zero
Your inbox is not your to do list!
(or it shouldn’t be)
“The truth is that you probably can take the
average email inbox – even a relatively neglected
one – from full to zero in about 20 minutes. It
mostly depends on how much you really want to
be done with it. The dirty little secret, of course,
is that you don’t do it by responding to each of
those emails but by ruthlessly processing them.”
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
28. “In an environment where attention is the economic
equivalent of cash, you aren’t doing people any favors
by sending gothic novels. And taking your cues for
etiquette, propriety, and efficiency on a message-by-
message basis will quickly land you in a very bouncy
room with a fresh box of crayons.”
Response does not need to be
proportional to request
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
29. “Good idea. I’ll add it to my to do list.”
“Here’s a link that might be what you’re
looking for…”
http://www.43folders.com/2006/03/13/email-cheats
“Do you still need this?”
“I don’t know”
[Delete]
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
31. Delete!
Most minimal response is none.
“Just remember that every email you
read, re-read, and re-re-re-re-re-read as it
sits in that big dumb pile is actually
incurring mental debt on your behalf.”
Be brutally honest - if you’re not going to
do anything with the email delete it now.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
32. Filters grey mail
“noisy, frequent, and non-urgent items
which can be dealt with all at a pass and
later.”
facebook, comments, university/
department memos, newsletters, mailing
lists
Good catch all: contains unsubscribe
http://www.43folders.com/2006/03/13/filters
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
34. Patricia Wallace, a techno-psychologist,
believes part of the allure of e-mail—
for adults as well as teens—is similar to
that of a slot machine. “You have
intermittent, variable reinforcement,”
she explains. You are not sure you are
going to get a reward every time or
how often you will, so you keep pulling
that handle.”
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
35. Email dashes
Don’t have your email open all day.
Schedule times when you respond to
emails.
You can tackle emails a lot faster when
you batch them up.
Lack self control (like me)? Try an internet
blocker: http://macfreedom.com/
http://www.43folders.com/2006/03/15/email-dash
Wednesday, 1 December 2010