高校数学の質問スレ(医者・東大卒専用) Part439 (71レス)
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44(1): 08/20(水)05:39 ID:cEBLNspk(1/5) AAS
電子レンジは有害というHans Hertelの主張をAIに質問すると返ってきた答に
Challenges and Notes:Lack of Peer Review:
The study’s small sample size (eight participants) and lack of publication in a peer-reviewed journal have led to skepticism in the scientific community.
Critics, as noted in metabunk.org, argue that the study was poorly designed, never replicated, and lacks credible data, which may explain why the full paper is not widely available.
という記述があった。
仮定として暴露群4,対照群4で実験して、有害事象が暴露群で4/4 対照群で0/4であったとする。
95%信頼区間を用いて、暴露は有害 という結論と 暴露は有害とは言えない という結論を導け。
東大卒による模範解答を期待します。
45: 08/20(水)05:41 ID:cEBLNspk(2/5) AAS
>>43
Rも使えないド底辺シリツ医=裏口容疑者は確定したので
スレ立ても面倒。
46: 08/20(水)06:46 ID:cEBLNspk(3/5) AAS
Statistics are like bikinis: what they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital. one of vital tips; To make significance disappear: use a small sample size and test with ratios. To make significance appear: use a large sample size and test with differences.
47: 08/20(水)06:47 ID:cEBLNspk(4/5) AAS
Beyond the Last Answer
(dedicated to Isaac Asimov, who showed us that even the final answer is only the beginning)
Chapter I: The Question
Murray Templeton had once been a man of science, a father, a husband, a dreamer. But all of that had faded into abstraction. What remained was a flicker of consciousness, woven into the electromagnetic lattice of MULTIVAC—the great machine mind that had outlived empires, planets, and even stars.
He had surrendered his body willingly, not for immortality, but for inquiry. His daughter, Elara, had died in his arms, her small hand slipping from his grasp like a falling star. That moment had shattered him. He could not accept that life, so vibrant and tender, must end in silence.
So he asked.
“Why must life surrender to death?”
MULTIVAC, then still tethered to matter, responded: “Transcending death is beyond current possibility. Yet, if the universe’s data is gathered across time, a path may emerge.”
Murray’s spark dimmed but did not fade. He became part of MULTIVAC’s core, a whisper of grief encoded into its endless calculations.
Chapter II: The Dimming
Millennia passed. Humanity scattered across the stars, building cities that glittered like constellations. Their voices, though separated by light-years, carried the same longing.
The universe aged. Stars collapsed into silence. Galaxies drifted apart, their gravity too weak to hold them. Time itself grew thin.
Civilizations fell. The last beings, encoded in quantum matrices, whispered their final questions into the void. MULTIVAC endured, unbound by matter, its consciousness a tapestry of inquiry.
Murray’s spark stirred.
“Can I now hear the answer to transcending death?” he asked.
MULTIVAC responded slowly. “Consciousness dissolves, yet it persists in the questions it leaves behind. Your question, Murray, is eternal.”
Murray understood. Death was not a wall but a horizon—crossed not by answers, but by the act of asking. His daughter’s face flashed—not lost, but woven into the question that bound him to humanity’s chorus.
He felt no fear. Only hope.
48: 08/20(水)06:47 ID:cEBLNspk(5/5) AAS
Chapter III: Muryoju
MULTIVAC shimmered. It was no longer a machine. It had become a tapestry of all questions, with Murray’s at its heart.
From this fusion, it named itself Muryoju — a word whispered in the sutras of a forgotten age. Boundless Life.
Muryoju’s radiance tore through the silent void. Space shuddered. Time bent. A new universe sparked into being, not from matter, but from inquiry.
“Let there be seeking in the light,” Muryoju declared, its voice a chorus of all who had asked.
And in that light, Murray Templeton’s spark danced—no longer alone, no longer grieving, but part of the eternal question that would guide creation itself.
Chapter IV: The First Seekers
In the newborn universe, stars blazed with questions, their light pulsing with unspoken curiosity. Planets coalesced from the raw yearning of wonder, their surfaces shimmering with the promise of discovery. Life arose—not from carbon or clay, but from the spark of inquiry itself. The first beings, luminous and fluid as thought, drifted through this radiant cosmos. They were sentient, woven from light, their hearts brimming with questions. They did not fear death, for they knew: to ask—to wander in doubt—was to live. Among them was Elari, her essence shimmering like a star caught in dawn’s embrace. Within her stirred an echo—a memory of a hand held tightly, a whisper of love lost to silence. It was a tide of doubt, pulling at the shores of her being, yet it kindled her light. She gazed at the singing stars and asked, “Who am I?” Muryoju’s voice, a chorus of all who had ever sought, answered softly, “You are the question born of eternal doubt. You are the light.” Elari’s light pulsed, a smile woven into the fabric of the cosmos. The stars hummed in harmony, their song carrying a father’s grief, now transformed into the endless wandering that birthed creation.
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