Most-visited posts
- Clinical trial design -- for beginners
- 3-act Structure -- Star Wars (original)
- Wang Wei -- The Deer Enclosure
- Tao Qian -- Pallbearer's Song
- Meng Haoran -- Spending the night at the farm of an old friend
- Thoreau: a "self-appointed inspector of snow-storms and rain-storms"
- . . . every thing would appear to man as it is, infinite
- Rupert Brooke's "Tiare Tahiti"
- Michelangelo's "Slave Awakening"
- Li Bai -- In the mountains, a question and an answer
Topics
. . . philosophy, classics, art, movies, literature, writing fiction and screenplays, my photography — also logic, artificial intelligence, mathematics, biostatistics, medical research . . . in other words, both halves of my brain: thinking in pictures and thinking in words . . .Categories
- Aiskhylos (2)
- Alfred Hitchcock (3)
- America (18)
- Ancient Greece (8)
- Being gay (9)
- Being human (37)
- Buffalo (5)
- Chicago (1)
- Chinese poetry (51)
- Classical music (1)
- Clinical research (6)
- Ethics (27)
- Greek Drama (2)
- Healthy communities (21)
- Herakleitos (1)
- Laozi (20)
- Li Bai (5)
- Literature (11)
- Medicine (9)
- Meng Haoran (9)
- Movies (12)
- New York City (4)
- Philosophy (7)
- Photography (15)
- Plato (6)
- Poetry (60)
- Politics (21)
- Quotations (8)
- Screenwriting (19)
- Spinal cord injury (2)
- Su Tung-P'o (10)
- Sustainability (14)
- Tao (21)
- Tao Qian (5)
- The arts (17)
- The mind (6)
- Uncategorized (1)
- Visual arts (17)
- Wang Wei (19)
- Writing (21)
- Youth (2)
Search this blog
Copyright notice
All text and original images in this blog © 1990-2010 by William P. Coleman. Some rights reserved. You may reuse only as specified in the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License or by written permission.About me
If you'd like to know more about me, please see the About page. My qualifications for the scientific entries are in my CV.
I see no reason to segregate scientific and technical posts from humanistic ones. In my life, scientific concerns mix with ethical ones, and they shade into a philosophical interest in the nature of cognition and the nature of people. Doing science is as creative as writing fiction, and I get inspiration for both from the same gods.
You will find little here on current politics. I'm an activist, but not in symptoms. Experience in martial arts shows me that the sure way to lose is reactivity; but if you stay cool and remember your training and what you're there for then you achieve goals and, when conflict is unavoidable, you fight and win. The idea of the liberal arts I was brought up in is that broad understanding of cultures and ideas gives you deeper, better goals -- making success more likely and more satisfying. Negatively, the hysteria since 9/11 shows how a country frightened and reactive can destroy itself more than an enemy can. I'm trying to contribute by changing the terms of discourse. . . . As Allen Ginsberg wrote, "America, I'm putting my queer shoulder to the wheel."
One fact shouldn't require special mention, but it sometimes does: namely that I'm gay. This blog is not primarily about being gay, but the topic sometimes comes up. I'm proud of being gay and do not hide.
Contact
wpc at wpcmath dot comMuse
Tag Archives: timing of decompressive surgery
Using ASIA Motor Score as outcome in spinal injury
In October ’06, the people at ICORD (International Collaboration On Repair Discoveries) in Vancouver asked me to give a talk. I spoke on Statistical Considerations in Designing a Trial in Spinal Cord Injury with ASIA Motor Score as the Outcome, … Continue reading
Posted in Clinical research, Medicine, Spinal cord injury
Tagged age, American Spinal Injury Association, ASIA, ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS), ASIA motor score, basic stats for clinical trials, biostatistics, cervical, Clinical research, clinical trial design, covariates, effect size, GM-1, ICORD, medical research, Medicine, multi-center trial, NASCIS, p-value, population subgroups, recruitment, sample size, Spinal cord injury, statistical power, Sygen, thoracic, timing of decompressive surgery
Leave a comment