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Review
. 2022 Apr 29;85(5).
doi: 10.1088/1361-6633/ac60ac.

Simple and statistically sound recommendations for analysing physical theories

Shehu S AbdusSalam  1 Fruzsina J Agocs  2   3 Benjamin C Allanach  4 Peter Athron  5   6 Csaba Balázs  6 Emanuele Bagnaschi  7 Philip Bechtle  8 Oliver Buchmueller  9 Ankit Beniwal  10 Jihyun Bhom  11 Sanjay Bloor  9   12 Torsten Bringmann  13 Andy Buckley  14 Anja Butter  15 José Eliel Camargo-Molina  16 Marcin Chrzaszcz  11 Jan Conrad  17 Jonathan M Cornell  18 Matthias Danninger  19 Jorge de Blas  20 Albert De Roeck  21 Klaus Desch  8 Matthew Dolan  22 Herbert Dreiner  8 Otto Eberhardt  23 John Ellis  24 Ben Farmer  9   25 Marco Fedele  26 Henning Flächer  27 Andrew Fowlie  1   5 Tomás E Gonzalo  5 Philip Grace  28 Matthias Hamer  8 Will Handley  2   3 Julia Harz  29 Sven Heinemeyer  30 Sebastian Hoof  31 Selim Hotinli  9 Paul Jackson  28 Felix Kahlhoefer  32 Kamila Kowalska  33 Michael Krämer  32 Anders Kvellestad  13 Miriam Lucio Martinez  34 Farvah Mahmoudi  35   36 Diego Martinez Santos  37 Gregory D Martinez  38 Satoshi Mishima  39 Keith Olive  40 Ayan Paul  41   42 Markus Tobias Prim  8 Werner Porod  43 Are Raklev  13 Janina J Renk  9   12   17 Christopher Rogan  44 Leszek Roszkowski  33   45 Roberto Ruiz de Austri  30 Kazuki Sakurai  46 Andre Scaffidi  47 Pat Scott  9   12 Enrico Maria Sessolo  33 Tim Stefaniak  41 Patrick Stöcker  32 Wei Su  28   48 Sebastian Trojanowski  33   45 Roberto Trotta  9   49 Yue-Lin Sming Tsai  50 Jeriek Van den Abeele  13 Mauro Valli  51 Aaron C Vincent  52   53   54 Georg Weiglein  41   55 Martin White  28 Peter Wienemann  8 Lei Wu  5 Yang Zhang  5   56
Affiliations
Review

Simple and statistically sound recommendations for analysing physical theories

Shehu S AbdusSalam et al. Rep Prog Phys. .

Abstract

Physical theories that depend on many parameters or are tested against data from many different experiments pose unique challenges to statistical inference. Many models in particle physics, astrophysics and cosmology fall into one or both of these categories. These issues are often sidestepped with statistically unsound ad hoc methods, involving intersection of parameter intervals estimated by multiple experiments, and random or grid sampling of model parameters. Whilst these methods are easy to apply, they exhibit pathologies even in low-dimensional parameter spaces, and quickly become problematic to use and interpret in higher dimensions. In this article we give clear guidance for going beyond these procedures, suggesting where possible simple methods for performing statistically sound inference, and recommendations of readily-available software tools and standards that can assist in doing so. Our aim is to provide any physicists lacking comprehensive statistical training with recommendations for reaching correct scientific conclusions, with only a modest increase in analysis burden. Our examples can be reproduced with the code publicly available at Zenodo.

Keywords: methodology; particle physics; statistics.

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