But then that's important to know right? After all we're too wedded to the idea of single differences. For example, let's investigate the brain one lesion at at time, or one lesion plus a control one and so on.
But then that's important to know right? After all we're too wedded to the idea of single differences. For example, let's investigate the brain one lesion at at time, or one lesion plus a control one and so on.
Agreed! As @neuralreckoning.bsky.social mentioned, in some preliminary work, we found that our approach and a Shapley estimate gave similar results. But, it would be worth revisiting with our full data set.