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Academic PapersCausalityHealth / Medicine / Disease
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Is Caviar a Risk Factor For Being a Millionaire?

by Anders_H
9th Dec 2016
1 min read
9

67

67

Is Caviar a Risk Factor For Being a Millionaire?
5NancyLebovitz
1Benquo
5Daniel_Burfoot
3jimrandomh
0Benquo
2jimrandomh
0Benquo
-1VortexLeague
0Anders_H
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[-]NancyLebovitz9y50

The link worked for me-- maybe they made it public when asked, but didn't tell you.

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[-]Benquo9y10

Same

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[-]Daniel_Burfoot9y50

Great title, congratulations on the paper acceptance.

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[-]jimrandomh9y30

I love this, especially the table. Splitting ambiguous, confused terms into their cases is how we stop flailing and figure things out.

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[-]Benquo9y00

Seconded

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[-]jimrandomh9y20

The link worked for me without a paywall. Maybe they're showing it to some people randomly? In any case, if you do get a paywall, you can work around it with sci-hub.cc.

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[-]Benquo9y00

Same - I was able to read it.

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[-]VortexLeague9y-10

Im new on LessWrong and I don't really understand how the system works. Please Help!!

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[-]Anders_H9y00

VortexLeague: Can you be a little more specific about what kind of help you need?

A very short, general introduction to Less Wrong is available at http://lesswrong.com/about/

Essentially, Less Wrong is a reddit-type forum for discussing how we can make our beliefs more accurate.

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Academic PapersCausalityHealth / Medicine / Disease
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Today, my paper "Is caviar a risk factor for being a millionaire?" was published in the Christmas Edition of the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal).  The paper is available at http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i6536 but it is unfortunately behind a paywall. I am hoping to upload an open access version to a preprint server but this needs to be confirmed with the journal first. 

In this paper, I argue that the term "risk factor" is ambiguous, and that this ambiguity causes pervasive methodological confusion in the epidemiological literature. I argue that many epidemiological papers essentially use an audio recorder to determine whether a tree falling in the forest makes a sound, without being clear about which definition of "sound" they are considering.

Even worse, I argue that epidemiologists often try to avoid claiming that their results say anything about causality, by hiding behind "prediction models". When they do this. they often still control extensively for "confounding", a term which only has a meaning in causal models. I argue that this is analogous to stating that you are interested in whether trees falling in the forest causes any human to perceive the qualia of hearing, and then spending your methods section discussing whether the audio recorder was working properly.

Due to space constraints and other considerations, I am unable to state these analogies explicitly in the paper, but it does include a call for a taboo on the word risk factor, and a reference to Rationality: AI to Zombies. To my knowledge, this is the first reference to the book in the medical literature.

I will give a short talk about this paper at the Less Wrong meetup at the MIRI/CFAR office in Berkeley at 6:30pm tonight.

(I apologize for this short, rushed announcement, I was planning to post a full writeup but I was not expecting this paper to be published for another week)