Damiano Cerasuolo

97 Followers
79 Following
265 Posts

Medical Doctor in Public Health and Social Medicine, MPH, PhD candidate. I work as (bio)statistician at the University Hospital of Caen and I teach #statistics and #PublicHealth at the University of Caen, Normandy. #Statsodon #StatsInMed

#Rstats #R user, #analogphotography enthusiast. I live between Caen and Paris, often travelling to Rome.

pronounshe/him/his
git pagehttps://damiacer.github.io
flickrhttps://www.flickr.com/photos/damiano-cer

[blog] Introducing distionary for Building and Probing Distributions 🐟 🔔

Vincenzo Coia presents distionary, a package for quickly and easily making probability distributions from a couple of inputs or from the built-in library.
Explore the package's main features with some nice examples and usecases.

https://ropensci.org/blog/2026/01/20/introducing-distionary/

🙏 Shoutouts to reviewers Katrina Brock and Christophe Dutang

#RStats
@[email protected]

Introducing distionary for Building and Probing Distributions

The distionary package is on CRAN and brings a new way to build and probe probability distributions in R, forming the building blocks of the probaverse ecosystem.

@socrates @LeafyEricScott @mplouffe I do understand. I thought that Fosstodon was working on the issue after the "statement on cleaning house" in May. I support this decision - I don't want Mastodon to be copy of the world we're living in - and I hope people move to safer servers.
Why has scholar.social blocked fosstodon.org? That's a loss for people interested in #rstats and science.

The anti-autocracy handbook: how scientists can cope with democratic backsliding. This guide is a call to action, resilience, and collective defence of democracy and academic freedom in the face of mounting authoritarianism.

https://zenodo.org/records/15696097
@EU_Commission

#democracy #acedemicfreedom #authoritarianism

The Anti-Autocracy Handbook: A Scholars' Guide to Navigating Democratic Backsliding

The Anti-Autocracy Handbook is a call to action, resilience, and collective defence of democracy, truth, and academic freedom in the face of mounting authoritarianism. It tries to provide guidance to scholars navigating the growing global trend of democratic backsliding and autocratization, in particular in the U.S. To this end, it sets out how autocracies often follow a common playbook, built around the “3 Ps”: populism, polarization, and post-truth. Leaders present themselves as voices of “the people” against “corrupt elites”, inflame societal divisions, and undermine facts to avoid accountability. This leads to a cascade of dangers for scholarship, including censorship, restrictions on funding and research collaboration, and even violence. The Trump administration serves as a contemporary example, with policies that curtail international scientific cooperation, revoke research grants, and suppress studies related to public health, climate change and minority issues. Because open inquiry and dissent are central to science and academia—qualities antithetical to authoritarian control—academia is often among the first targets of autocrats. To help scholars resist authoritarian developments, the handbook highlights both historic and contemporary measures aimed at attacking scholars, their institutional environments, and their scholarship. The handbook also sets out a framework for action based on personal risk level—low, medium, high, or extreme. This is designed to help scholars think about their own risk and purposefully choose actions in line with it. The handbook considers tools for enhancing digital safety and highlights the importance of ongoing documentation, preserving imperilled data, and creating distributed archives as a defence against erasure. It also calls on scholars to tell their stories—publicly or anonymously—to inspire others, maintain accountability and preserve a historical record. Accompanying the handbook is a living wiki that will continue to incorporate new developments and provide updates on global efforts by scholars to push back against authoritarianism and safeguard the democratic foundations that enable free inquiry.   Available translations German version: Das Anti-Autokratie-Handbuch: Ein Leitfaden fĂŒr Forschende zum Umgang mit erodierenden Demokratien Italian version: Il manuale Anti-Autocrazia: Una guida per aiutare gli studiosi ad orientarsi nell'arretramento democratico

Zenodo

Registration is open for the useR! 2025 Virtual Program! The program features speakers from a diverse range of industries and parts of the world, covering topics from the basic to the advanced. Registration is free with options for suggested donations.

user2025.r-project.org/register

#RStats #useR2025

"Europe is ready to assume its responsibilities.

ReArm Europe could mobilise close to €800 billion for a safe and resilient Europe.

This is a moment for Europe. And we are ready to step up."

— President von der Leyen on the defence package

@pautasso I think there is no direct way to print those comments. You could copy and paste the comments into notes to diplay (and then print) with todonotes or marginnote packages.

Interesting short paper about the debates on Bayesian inference in the 1950s

Bayesian issues in the 1950s: an episode involving Karl Popper and Jimmie Savage

- Stephen M Stigler

https://doi.org/10.1093/jrsssa/qnae044

If you ask #LeChat by #MistralAI whether it uses or not your data, it answers that it is not concerned since it is not associated with Mistral AI and its application.

But questions about its data use have been raised. To read [in French] https://www.frandroid.com/culture-tech/2502271_la-start-up-francaise-mistral-le-chat-dans-la-tourmente-pour-entorse-presumee-au-rgpd

#AI

La start-up française Mistral (Le Chat) dans la tourmente pour entorse présumée au RGPD

Alors que la start-up française Mistral a Ă©tĂ© sur toutes les bouches lors du « sommet pour l’IA » organisĂ©e Ă  Paris, en parallĂšle, l’entreprise faisait

Frandroid