I sincerely want to thank you for your wonderful explanation on error bars. I have learnt to do the error bars for 4 years and I have no idea what it does until today. Once again, a warm thank you for this upload! Have a nice day! :)
Hi Michael Ewins I really want to thank you for sharing this video with us. I was always confused about how do we describe data with respect to error bars. Thumbs up for nice explanation.
Sorry I have a question, I thought: If error bars DO NOT overlap, then data for one group CAN be different from another. But it doesn't have to? Thank you for the video though!
Alexandra, thanks for the question. If the error bars of group X and Y do not overlap, then groups X and Y are statistically different (the majority of their trials are not in the same range). That doesn’t stop you from comparing them to other data sets though. So group Z could then have error bars that overlap with either X or Y and you would then say that group Z was similar to any other overlapping group. Hope that provides some clarity.
this came up on a national examination of every (sophomore equivalent) year 11 student in the UK on a biology paper comparing the drug Metformin with Metformin combinations. yeah.
I sincerely want to thank you for your wonderful explanation on error bars. I have learnt to do the error bars for 4 years and I have no idea what it does until today. Once again, a warm thank you for this upload! Have a nice day! :)
Glad it was helpful, if a little boring :)
Thank you so much, your the only one that explains this concept on UA-cam!!!
Here in 2022 using error bars for my senior thesis in undergrad. Thank you so much! All of my data is inconclusive but fuck it! That's science!
I am with you on this. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hi Michael Ewins I really want to thank you for sharing this video with us. I was always confused about how do we describe data with respect to error bars. Thumbs up for nice explanation.
Instablaster
oh my god thank you i love you
thank you for the excellent explanation!
This is superb. Thank you!
Sorry I have a question, I thought: If error bars DO NOT overlap, then data for one group CAN be different from another. But it doesn't have to? Thank you for the video though!
Alexandra, thanks for the question. If the error bars of group X and Y do not overlap, then groups X and Y are statistically different (the majority of their trials are not in the same range). That doesn’t stop you from comparing them to other data sets though. So group Z could then have error bars that overlap with either X or Y and you would then say that group Z was similar to any other overlapping group.
Hope that provides some clarity.
this came up on a national examination of every (sophomore equivalent) year 11 student in the UK on a biology paper comparing the drug Metformin with Metformin combinations. yeah.
bruh that was very useful, good work, keep it up :D
Grateful for this video 👀
Thank you!
Overlapping error bars does not necessitate inconclusive results.
I would like to honestly thank you.
Great explanation, wasn't very easy to understand just by reading.
that was really helpful
Thanks, helpful
Thank you bro
my goat
Thankyou !!!
This is very bad. It does not even tell us what the error bars represent.
Interesting
Cheers