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Past winners and finalists of the Significance/YSS writing competition

By January 10, 2019February 19th, 2024No Comments

If you are thinking of entering our annual writing competition for early-career statisticians, we recommend you read articles from past winners and finalists to get a sense of the style of writing and storytelling that judges are looking for.

Below is a list of published articles from previous years’ competitions.

2023

Winner: Surfing the Korean wave by Robyn Goldsmith

Finalist: How many words in Shakespeare’s vocabulary? by James Jackson

Finalist: Boxing with George Box by Kenneth Menglin Lee

2022

Winner: Baseball’s natural experiment by Lee Kennedy-Shaffer

Finalist: How to lose a girl in two standard deviations: Where are the STEM rom-coms? by Veronica Carlan

Finalist: How fake is real enough? Privacy and synthetic data by Achilleas Ghinis

2021

Winner: Pietro the weather tortoise and the pursuit of soggy bun prevention by Conner Jackson

Finalist: Are professors and football stars just lucky? by Anna Beukenhorst

Finalist: We’re not getting any younger! Or should that be “older”? by Nicola Rennie

2020

Winner: Primum non nocere (First, do no harm) by Maria Ibrahim

2019

Winner: The flying bomb and the actuary by Liam P. Shaw and Luke F. Shaw

2018

Winner: Cooking up statistics: The science and the art by Letisha Smith

Finalist: Preventing cancer: mere rhetoric or a promising plan? by Mats Julius Stensrud and Morten Valberg

2017

Winner: We, the millennials: The statistical significance of political significance by Kevin Lin

Finalist: The Promise: When truth overshadows power by Levon Demirdjian

Finalist: A time to kill: Great British serial killers by Charlotte Moragh Jones-Todd

2016

Winner: The frequency of “America” in America by Adam B. Kashlak

Finalist: Queen Elizabeth II – an extreme event monarch? by Anastasia Frantsuzova

2015

Winner: Warren Buffett: Oracle or orang‐utan? by James Skeffington

Finalist: The Great British Bayes-off: How much difference (statistically) does a soggy bottom make? by Annie Herbert

Finalist: The joy of clustering by Samantha Tyner

2014

Winner: Does New York City really have as many rats as people? by Jonathan Auerbach

Finalist: Does Christmas really come earlier every year? by Nathan Cunningham

Finalist: Do NHS records reflect patient ethnicity? by Katie Saunders

2013

Winners: GUESTimation: Breaking the deadlock on wedding guest lists by Damjan Vukcevic

Finalist: Uncertainties in climate models: Living with uncertainty in an uncertain world by Lindsay Lee

2012

Winner: What’s the point of a point estimate?: Why statistics lectures confuse students by Danielle Morris

Finalist: Listening to uncertainty: Information that sings by Ethan Brown and Nick Bearman

Finalist: Side‐effects in antidepressants: The drug or the disease? by Linda Wijlaars

Finalist: What Petri dishes have to do with your research by Douglas VanDerweken