I'll be honest, I'm not trying to make this pretty. (And I didn't. I literally asked Grok to facelift it for me.) I'm trying to make it as easily functional as possible. It contains a history of all the presentations I've made since starting down my exercise physiology path.
Like my collections elsewhere, they are slides (for now) entirely made up of reveal.js presentations. This gives quite a bit of flexibility to how I present, although it's a bit guarded by my (basic) web-coding ability.
The intent is to have an easy web-digestible location for all my semi-major stuff.
If it was a presentation, it's here. If I created an R markdown notebook and exported to html or pdf, it's here.
Due to privacy constraints, I typically won't have the raw data here, nor even the data analyses work conducted using. But this will have my thought processes--almost a working notebook of how I got to what I did and what decisions I made along the way.
Commentary:
I strongly believe that when we simply say "I did some analysis." How the analysis is done is important. The actual code used is generally the black box that no one looks into. We can cite "I used R" or "I used SASS," but when we do, we are doing black box work--work that is, by definition, not repeatable. And that is a failing as scientists.
So this is my commitment: whenever I do analysis, I'll provide my code. That way there is no black box around my analysis.
Further, there is precedent for this approach. I don't necessarily follow it as suggested, but I try.
Click here for curriculum vitae
Ultrasound imaging portfolio. Images I've taken on ultrasound.
Last updated 2 June 2024.
Newest images Dec 2023.
I've probably improved since then.
For all papers I have a primary authorship and analytical role on, I will provide my analyses here. Needs significant update, Lee J...
Links to page, and all slides for that class are available there, with instructions about how to use.