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| We introduce the concept of signal and noise in "detection problems" and teach students how to identify the signal and various sources of noise in diverse scenarios. This foreshadows the [[5.1 False Positives and Negatives|ethical considerations in deciding how strong a signal must be to be counted as a "positive"]]. | | We introduce the concept of signal and noise in "detection problems" and teach students how to identify the signal and various sources of noise in diverse scenarios. This foreshadows the [[5.1 False Positives and Negatives|ethical considerations in deciding how strong a signal must be to be counted as a "positive"]]. |
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| <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to earlier lessons. --> | | <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to other lessons. --> |
| {{Expand|Relation to Earlier Lessons| | | {{Expand|Relation to Other Lessons| |
| | '''Earlier Lessons''' |
| {{ContextLesson|2.2 Systematic and Statistical Uncertainty}} | | {{ContextLesson|2.2 Systematic and Statistical Uncertainty}} |
| {{ContextRelation|Both systematic and statistical uncertainties introduce noise to every measurement.}} | | {{ContextRelation|Both systematic and statistical uncertainties introduce noise to every measurement.}} |
| {{ContextLesson|3.1 Probabilistic Reasoning}} | | {{ContextLesson|3.1 Probabilistic Reasoning}} |
| {{ContextRelation|The presence of noise, which sometimes disguises as a signal, is inevitable in any measurement. The identification of a signal always comes with a roughly quantifiable level of confidence.}} | | {{ContextRelation|The presence of noise, which sometimes disguises as a signal, is inevitable in any measurement. The identification of a signal always comes with a roughly quantifiable level of confidence.}} |
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| <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to later lessons. -->
| | '''Later Lessons''' |
| {{Expand|Relation to Later Lessons|
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| {{ContextLesson|4.2 Finding Patterns in Random Noise}} | | {{ContextLesson|4.2 Finding Patterns in Random Noise}} |
| {{ContextRelation|In addition to the signal-to-noise ratio, there are other statistical tools (e.g. <math>p</math>-value) to quantify the strength of the signal amidst all the noise.}} | | {{ContextRelation|In addition to the signal-to-noise ratio, there are other statistical tools (e.g. <math>p</math>-value) to quantify the strength of the signal amidst all the noise.}} |