Reading assignments
- Week 1
- Chapters 1 and 2 in Sivia
Eddy, What is Bayesian statistics?
Wickham, Tidy Data
- Week 2
- Chapter 3 in Sivia
Rougier, et al. Ten simple rules for
better figures; see
also original Python code to generate
figures in the paper.
Source papers for data sets
- Kleinteich and Gorb, Tongue adhesion in
the horned frog Ceratophrys
sp., Sci. Rep., 4, 5225,
2014
- Gardner, Zanic, et al., Depolymerizing
kinesins Kip3 and MCAK shape cellular
microtubule architecture by differential control
of catastrophe, Cell, 147,
1092-1103, 2011
- Prober, et al., Hypocretin/Orexin
overexpression induces an insomnia-like
phenotype in zebrafish, J. Neurosci., 26,
13400-13410, 2006
- Gandhi, et al., Melatonin Is
required for the circadian regulation of sleep
Neuron, 85, 1193-1199, 2015
- Good, et al., Cytoplasmic volume
modulates spindle size during
embryogenesis, Science, 342,
856-860, 2013
- Reeves, Trisnadi, et al., Dorsal-ventral
gene expression in the Drosophila embryo
reflects the dynamics and precision of the
Dorsal nuclear
gradient, Dev. Cell, 22, 544-557,
2012
Books
- D. S. Sivia, Data Analysis: A
Bayesian Tutorial, 2nd Ed., Oxford
University Press, 2006. This is our main text
for the course. It is also available in electronic form (though you cannot download
the entire book as a PDF) here.
- Gonzalez and Woods, Digital Image
Processing, 3rd Ed., Prentice-Hall,
2007. This is the standard book for the basics
of image processing.
- Phil Gregory, Bayesian Logical Data
Analysis for the Physical Sciences,
Cambridge University Press, 2005. This goes
into more depth on many of the topics covered in
Sivia. It also
has an addendum.
- David MacKay, Information Theory,
Inference, and Learning Algorithms,
Cambridge University Press, 2003. This
excellent book beautifiully ties together three
related areas of science in a clear,
pedagogical, and sometimes humorous manner.
(Available for free online from the link.)
Auxiliary Books
- The Think X series by Allen Downey are excellent
pedagogical books for learning basic programming and
statistics. They are available for free online. The most
useful
are Think
Stats, Think
Bayes,
and Think
Python.
- Richard McElreath, Statistical Rethinking, CRC Press, 2015. This new book is a clear, delightful read about Bayesian statistics.
- Geoff
Cumming, Understanding the New Statistics,
Routledge, 2012. This book gives clear discussion of the
importance of effect size and the dangers of mininterpreting
hypothesis tests.
- Blitzstein and Hwang, Introduction to
Probability, Chapman and Hall/CRC, 2014. This is a
beautiful book explaining fundamental concepts in
probability.
- Kinder
and Nelson, A Student's Guide to Python for Physical
Modeling, Princeton University Press, 2015. This is
a nice book to have by your side while getting your feet wet
with Python.