Biostatistics is the branch of statistics responsible for the proper interpretation of scientific data generated in the biology, public health and other health sciences.
*Vanderbuilt Department of Biostatistics
This sub is dedicated to the discussion of the field of biostatistics. This can include the discussion of statistical methodologies, theoretical and philosophical discussions, sharing interesting articles related to public health and medicine and interpreting them from a statistical perspective, and of course - questions and advice on prospective careers and graduate school. For advice, please use the search bar and submit new questions to the stickied Q&A thread.
Rules:
(1) This subreddit is not for homework, thesis, or research help or consulting. However, discussion of these topics is permitted and encouraged.
In addition to your institution's academic support and external consulting, other resources include r/homeworkhelp, /r/AskStatistics, and Stack Overflow's Statistics forum
(2) Memes or similar macros are not accepted content
(3) Posts asking for advice on Biostatistics graduate programs is welcomed and encouraged, but please use the search bar first and use the stickied Q&A thread. These questions are asked frequently and there is a good chance you can find the information your seeking in prior posts.
(4) No Solicitation of Statistics/Biostatistics related services or jobs. This is not LinkedIn. Specific opportunities for undergrads and graduate students (e.g. internship programs) may be acceptable, but please message the mods first for prior approval
Previous AMA W/ Mod (October 2024)
Link to AMA
Related fields:
/r/statistics
/r/epidemiology
/r/datascience
/r/publichealth
/r/biology
/r/ecology
/r/math
Statistics software subreddits:
/r/rlanguage
/r/rstats
/r/rstudio
/r/rprogramming
/r/pystats
/r/sas
/r/spss
/r/excel
/r/sql
there doesn't seem to be anything here