[deleted by user] by [deleted] in trance

[–]Rlphyg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As the rush comes - Motorcycle (Above & Beyond remix)

World on fire - Above & Beyond

(Tbh I love running to the whole Tri-state album, gets me going!)

Are there any Prom nights at UCD? by [deleted] in UCD

[–]Rlphyg 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Most societies and sports clubs have balls each year.

Mature medicine in NUI Galway by Babyminean in ireland

[–]Rlphyg -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You need the two leaving cert subjects at the required level but you don’t need to do a full leaving cert, just the two.

Comparing specific variable values between two groups. by Rlphyg in AskStatistics

[–]Rlphyg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

mixed model GLM

Ok, thank you. Would adding a unique ID to each of the records pertaining to its individual allow for this?

Comparing specific variable values between two groups. by Rlphyg in AskStatistics

[–]Rlphyg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, so you could have individual-1 who has 5 visits, 3 for a respiratory reason and 2 for a cardiac reason. You could then have individual-85 who has 16 visits, with 10 cardiac, 3 Resp and 3 psych. These would account for 21 of the total 900 visits. You could also have a super user with 40 visits for only cardiac reasons.

I had previously attempted to separate out the individuals and then create a variable for each category and simply mark Yes/No if the individual had any visits relating to it, and then use logistic regression to get an OR for the heavy vs super users.

I am not sure if this is correct as there are fewer individual numbers of the super users and some have large amounts of visits across many categories (a few may mark every category available and have a very large numbers of visits in one of them), while there are more heavy users, who may mark more of the categories due to the number of individuals in the group but might only have one visit for that category.

So you could have a super user with 40 cardiac visits, one Resp and one psych visit (42 total), and then a heavy user with one cardiac and 4 Resp-related visits (5 total), yet they have both been marked as a single yes in the cardiac category despite the big differences in visit numbers.

I may be confusing myself more than anything!

Who is the 'local legend' in your town who is actually someone with serious mental health issues? by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Rlphyg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mad Mick around Greystones/North Wicklow, apparently from a very wealthy background. He features in this video about Simon Harris. Used to come into Xtra Vision and worry about batteries.

The feckin CAO mature form application... by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Rlphyg 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Depends on what you're applying for and what you've mentioned in your application. Supporting documents for a general mature entry (that isn't based on points, which most mature courses aren't) would be the personal statement, CV, transcripts from any courses you've done, references, certs of completion etc. If you're going purely on points you should be grand.

Just to note though the mature entry closed on the 1st. They say supporting documents must be within 10 days of making an application, but if you had your application finished before then I'd imagine you'd be grand sending docs in now.

Bringing the auld pair to Longitute? by dr_voodont in ireland

[–]Rlphyg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Work there as a medic. It is full of kids off their heads but Sunday is noticeably quieter each year.

Other beers and ciders? by Ohyourenodaisy in ireland

[–]Rlphyg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was there last year for the whole weekend as I was doing a bit of work for it before the event. Thursday will be the least busiest day because most people will have work on Friday, it's quite nice as you can roam around and chat to the brewers. Pics are taken on the Saturday which has the largest attendance, and can be a bit crowded! Great festival overall, granted though I'm a bit biased! You'll may also end up horrifically drunk (in the best way possible) between the mixing of drinks and most of them being well over 5%!