Welcome to our first "real" practical experience in `R`. The following notes present you with an example of how data handling (also known as data cleaning) can be done. Obviously, the possibility for flaws to occur in any given data set are seemingly endless and so the following, tedious procedure should be thought of as less of an recipe of how to fix common flaws in biological data sets but make you aware of how important proper data collection and data entry is.
Welcome to our second practical experience in `R`. Throughout the following notes, I will introduce you to a couple nominal statistical test approaches that might be useful to you and are often used in biology. To do so, I will enlist the sparrow data set we handled in our last exercise.
Welcome to our third practical experience in R. Throughout the following notes, I will introduce you to a couple statistical correlation approaches that might be useful to you and are, to varying degrees, often used in biology. To do so, I will enlist the sparrow data set we handled in our first exercise.
Welcome to our fourth practical experience in R. Throughout the following notes, I will introduce you to a couple statistical approaches for metric or ordinal data when wanting to compare two samples/populations that might be useful to you and are, to varying degrees, often used in biology. To do so, I will enlist the sparrow data set we handled in our first exercise.
Welcome to our fifth practical experience in R. Throughout the following notes, I will introduce you to a couple statistical approaches for metric or ordinal data when wanting to compare more than two samples/populations that might be useful to you and are, to varying degrees, often used in biology. To do so, I will enlist the sparrow data set we handled in our first exercise.
Welcome to our sixth practical experience in R. Throughout the following notes, I will introduce you to a couple of simple parametric test. Whilst parametric tests are used extremely often in biological statistics, they can be somewhat challenging to fit to your data as you will see soon. To do so, I will enlist the sparrow data set we handled in our first exercise. Additionally, todays seminar is showing plotting via base plot instead of `ggplot2` to highlight the usefulness of base plot and show you the base notation.