4.8 • 626 Ratings
🗓️ 12 March 2019
⏱️ 54 minutes
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About This Episode:
Bryan Chung is a plastic/hand surgeon and PhD research designer. He is a methodologist who improves people’s relationship with science.
In This Episode We Discuss:
--> Bryan’s advice column for people who have “relationship problems with Science”
--> If things merely confirm what you are already doing, why you should filter it out
--> How to determine what is practically meaningful from a study
--> The importance of establishing what the research question is
--> How to deal with the daunting nature of statistics in research
--> Why you’re already good enough to start engaging with research
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0:00.0 | Nobody knows your clients better than you do. |
0:12.0 | And nobody knows your experience better than you do. |
0:16.0 | So in some ways, nobody should know the type of research that informs your decisions like you do. |
0:22.6 | And being able to develop that skill is now increasingly more important because the research that you read has a heavier weight than it used to have. |
0:31.6 | And so if you can't understand it, then you're going to start depending on other people to make it important or not important for you. |
0:39.3 | And that might not actually be the best scenario for your client, |
0:43.3 | who is ultimately the person that 273 of the podcast, And as always, I am your host, |
1:15.9 | Danny Lennon. Thank you so much for taking the time to listen into the show today. And for those |
1:21.9 | of you who have been listening over the past couple of weeks, you've really had a great response to |
1:26.0 | those. And I think they've been some big episodes. |
1:28.8 | So for anyone who's missed them, the past few episodes might be worth going back and checking out. |
1:34.0 | We had a couple of weeks back, episode 270 with Alex Colliery Turner from the University of Brighton, |
1:40.0 | where we talked about anabolic steroids and the impact on muscle memory and how this has implications |
1:46.4 | in anti-doping. |
1:47.5 | We got into all that type of cool stuff. |
1:50.3 | Then last week, I had Professor John Hawley talk about his lab's recent work on circadian |
1:55.9 | metabolomics and humans. |
1:58.0 | And in our last episode, Professor Barbara DeCorton talked about the potential for |
2:03.3 | carnacine in reducing risk of chronic disease development. So those few episodes might be worth |
2:10.1 | checking out if you haven't done so already. Today, I'm delighted to welcome back Dr. Brian Chung |
2:16.0 | to the podcast, who was on the show probably four years ago at this point nearly where we talked all about evidence-based practice and that was had been a key aspect that he tries to communicate to people and to educate people on of how to be better with dealing with |
2:36.1 | evidence. And that landscape has changed drastically over the past few years. I think the term |
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