The Data Skeptic Podcast features interviews and discussion of topics related to data science, stati
We are excited to be joined by J.D. Zamfirescu-Pereira, a Ph.D. student at UC Berkeley. He focuses o
In this episode, we are joined by Ryan Liu, a Computer Science graduate of Carnegie Mellon Universit
The creators of large language models impose restrictions on some of the types of requests one might
Our guest today is Maciej Świechowski. Maciej is affiliated with QED Software and QED Games. He has
Today on the show, we are joined by Lin Zhao and Lu Zhang. Lin is a Senior Research Scientist at Uni
On today’s show, we are joined by Michael Timothy Bennett, a Ph.D. student at the Australian Nationa
We are joined by Koen Holtman, an independent AI researcher focusing on AI safety. Koen is the Found
An assistant professor of Psychology at Harvard University, Tomer Ullman, joins us. Tomer discussed
The application of LLMs cuts across various industries. Today, we are joined by Steven Van Vaerenber
Fabricio Goes, a Lecturer in Creative Computing at the University of Leicester, joins us today. Fabr
Barry Smith and Jobst Landgrebe, authors of the book “Why Machines will never Rule the World,” join
While the possibilities with AGI emergence seem great, it also calls for safety concerns. On the sho
Julian Michael, a postdoc at the Center for Data Science, New York University, joins us today. Julia
Kyle shares his own perspectives on challenges getting insight from surveys. The discussion ranges
Jeff Jones, a Senior Editor at Gallup, joins us today. His conversation with Kyle spanned a range of
Gireeja Ranade, a University of California at Berkeley professor, speaks with us today. She presente
Today, we are joined by David Bourget. David is an Associate Professor in Philosophy at Western Univ
Today’s show focused on an essential part of surveys — missing values. This is typically caused by a
We are joined by two guests today, Mariah, a Ph.D. student in the CORE Robotics Lab at Georgia Tech,
Ever wondered what your next career would be? Today, Keyon Vafa, a computer science Ph.D. student at