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In the Applied Statistics Blog this week

1. Understanding the ‘Russian Mortality Paradox’ in Central Asia: Evidence from Kyrgyzstan

Short answer: alcohol and suicide.

2. Lumberjacks as a counterexample to the idea of a “risk premium”

They take lots of risks and don’t get paid well for it.

3. Cell size and scale

This is a visualization you won’t want to miss.

4. Three guys named Matt

5. The political philosophy of the private eye

A genre that was rendered obsolete in 1961 (but nobody realizes it).

P.S. No, I won’t be pluggin my other blogs every week, just wanted to do it this once (and maybe every now and then if something politically relevant comes up).

Comments

It at least remains unclear whether, if the risks of lumberjacking (which sounds like some hideous Urban Dictionary practice) went up (down), then, all other things being equal, lumberjacks would demand higher (accept lower) pay.