References Used in This Module: For Web Resources, Links Will Open in Separate Windows

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Summary

You've now been introduced to inference, hypothesis testing, and p-values. Understanding
these concepts can help you make wise comparisons.
References used in this module

For web resources, links will open in separate windows.

 Cairo, Alberto. The Truthful Art: Data, Charts, and Maps for


Communication. Indianapolis, IN: New Riders, 2016.
 Cairo, Alberto. "Explaining visualizations in The New York Times, NPR,
and the BBC." The Functional Art (blog), 2019. Blog link.

Access Alberto Cairo's professional website.

 Cairo, Alberto. "Those Hurricane Maps Don't Mean What You Think
They Mean." The New York Times, 2019. Article link.
 "Hack Your Way to Scientific Glory." FiveThirtyEight. ABC News
Internet Ventures. Article link.
 Jones, Ben. Avoiding Data Pitfalls: How to Steer Clear of Common
Blunders when Working with Data and Presenting Analysis and
Visualizations. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2019.

You can access Ben Jones' professional website, Data Literacy, here.

 Lane, David M. Introduction to Statistics. Online Statistics Education:


An Interactive Multimedia Course of Study, 2020. 

To select a textbook version for web or mobile, access the website here. Or access a PDF of
the textbook here.

 Wasserstein, Ronald and Nicole Lazar. "The ASA Statement On P-


Values: Context, Process, And Purpose." The American Statistician,
2016. Article link.

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