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courses:rg:2013:significance-bootstrap [2013/12/03 18:40] lauschmannova bigger headline |
courses:rg:2013:significance-bootstrap [2013/12/09 19:28] (current) lauschmannova notes and answers to the questions |
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+ | ====Notes==== | ||
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====Questions==== | ====Questions==== | ||
- | - (warm-up) The abbreviation " | + | - **(warm-up) The abbreviation " |
- | - (bootstrapping) | + | - **(bootstrapping)** |
- | - In footnote 2, the authors mention that counting the cases with delta<0 is equivalent to counting the cases with delta> | + | - **In footnote 2, the authors mention that counting the cases with delta<0 is equivalent to counting the cases with delta> |
- | - Later in the article, the authors reorder all tested pairs so that delta>0. Do the assumptions from part 2.2 and footnote 2 still hold? | + | - **Later in the article, the authors reorder all tested pairs so that delta>0. Do the assumptions from part 2.2 and footnote 2 still hold?** The reordering concerns pairs of systems. Throughout the paper, the authors assume that for a given pair of systems, delta(x)> |
- | - (a recurrent theme) Why is a small metric gain more significant between similar systems? | + | - **(a recurrent theme) Why is a small metric gain more significant between similar systems?** See the notes in pdf; basically, the larger the correlation between the systems, the smaller the variance of the difference between the metrics (on sentences or documents). Variance appears in the denominator in the various formulas for the test statistics, so smaller variance leads to larger t-value and smaller p-value. More intuitively, |
- | - (important) Sum up (in 3-5 sentences) what you want to remember from reading this paper. | + | - **(important) Sum up (in 3-5 sentences) what you want to remember from reading this paper.** |
- | - (creative) Formulate at least 1 question that you would like to ask the authors of the paper.</ | + | - **(creative) Formulate at least 1 question that you would like to ask the authors of the paper.** |
+ | - They said that GIZA++ failed to produce reasonable output when trained | ||
+ | - Explain footnote 5. |