.github/skills/engineering-team/senior-data-scientist/SKILL.md
World-class senior data scientist skill specialising in statistical modeling, experiment design, causal inference, and predictive analytics. Covers A/B testing (sample sizing, two-proportion z-tests, Bonferroni correction), difference-in-differences, feature engineering pipelines (Scikit-learn, XGBoost), cross-validated model evaluation (AUC-ROC, AUC-PR, SHAP), and MLflow experiment tracking — using Python (NumPy, Pandas, Scikit-learn), R, and SQL. Use when designing or analysing controlled experiments, building and evaluating classification or regression models, performing causal analysis on observational data, engineering features for structured tabular datasets, or translating statistical findings into data-driven business decisions.
npx skillsauth add desenyon/infinitecontex senior-data-scientistInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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World-class senior data scientist skill for production-grade AI/ML/Data systems.
import numpy as np
from scipy import stats
def calculate_sample_size(baseline_rate, mde, alpha=0.05, power=0.8):
"""
Calculate required sample size per variant.
baseline_rate: current conversion rate (e.g. 0.10)
mde: minimum detectable effect (relative, e.g. 0.05 = 5% lift)
"""
p1 = baseline_rate
p2 = baseline_rate * (1 + mde)
effect_size = abs(p2 - p1) / np.sqrt((p1 * (1 - p1) + p2 * (1 - p2)) / 2)
z_alpha = stats.norm.ppf(1 - alpha / 2)
z_beta = stats.norm.ppf(power)
n = ((z_alpha + z_beta) / effect_size) ** 2
return int(np.ceil(n))
def analyze_experiment(control, treatment, alpha=0.05):
"""
Run two-proportion z-test and return structured results.
control/treatment: dicts with 'conversions' and 'visitors'.
"""
p_c = control["conversions"] / control["visitors"]
p_t = treatment["conversions"] / treatment["visitors"]
pooled = (control["conversions"] + treatment["conversions"]) / (control["visitors"] + treatment["visitors"])
se = np.sqrt(pooled * (1 - pooled) * (1 / control["visitors"] + 1 / treatment["visitors"]))
z = (p_t - p_c) / se
p_value = 2 * (1 - stats.norm.cdf(abs(z)))
ci_low = (p_t - p_c) - stats.norm.ppf(1 - alpha / 2) * se
ci_high = (p_t - p_c) + stats.norm.ppf(1 - alpha / 2) * se
return {
"lift": (p_t - p_c) / p_c,
"p_value": p_value,
"significant": p_value < alpha,
"ci_95": (ci_low, ci_high),
}
# --- Experiment checklist ---
# 1. Define ONE primary metric and pre-register secondary metrics.
# 2. Calculate sample size BEFORE starting: calculate_sample_size(0.10, 0.05)
# 3. Randomise at the user (not session) level to avoid leakage.
# 4. Run for at least 1 full business cycle (typically 2 weeks).
# 5. Check for sample ratio mismatch: abs(n_control - n_treatment) / expected < 0.01
# 6. Analyze with analyze_experiment() and report lift + CI, not just p-value.
# 7. Apply Bonferroni correction if testing multiple metrics: alpha / n_metrics
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler, OneHotEncoder
from sklearn.impute import SimpleImputer
from sklearn.compose import ColumnTransformer
def build_feature_pipeline(numeric_cols, categorical_cols, date_cols=None):
"""
Returns a fitted-ready ColumnTransformer for structured tabular data.
"""
numeric_pipeline = Pipeline([
("impute", SimpleImputer(strategy="median")),
("scale", StandardScaler()),
])
categorical_pipeline = Pipeline([
("impute", SimpleImputer(strategy="most_frequent")),
("encode", OneHotEncoder(handle_unknown="ignore", sparse_output=False)),
])
transformers = [
("num", numeric_pipeline, numeric_cols),
("cat", categorical_pipeline, categorical_cols),
]
return ColumnTransformer(transformers, remainder="drop")
def add_time_features(df, date_col):
"""Extract cyclical and lag features from a datetime column."""
df = df.copy()
df[date_col] = pd.to_datetime(df[date_col])
df["dow_sin"] = np.sin(2 * np.pi * df[date_col].dt.dayofweek / 7)
df["dow_cos"] = np.cos(2 * np.pi * df[date_col].dt.dayofweek / 7)
df["month_sin"] = np.sin(2 * np.pi * df[date_col].dt.month / 12)
df["month_cos"] = np.cos(2 * np.pi * df[date_col].dt.month / 12)
df["is_weekend"] = (df[date_col].dt.dayofweek >= 5).astype(int)
return df
# --- Feature engineering checklist ---
# 1. Never fit transformers on the full dataset — fit on train, transform test.
# 2. Log-transform right-skewed numeric features before scaling.
# 3. For high-cardinality categoricals (>50 levels), use target encoding or embeddings.
# 4. Generate lag/rolling features BEFORE the train/test split to avoid leakage.
# 5. Document each feature's business meaning alongside its code.
from sklearn.model_selection import StratifiedKFold, cross_validate
from sklearn.metrics import make_scorer, roc_auc_score, average_precision_score
import xgboost as xgb
import mlflow
SCORERS = {
"roc_auc": make_scorer(roc_auc_score, needs_proba=True),
"avg_prec": make_scorer(average_precision_score, needs_proba=True),
}
def evaluate_model(model, X, y, cv=5):
"""
Cross-validate and return mean ± std for each scorer.
Use StratifiedKFold for classification to preserve class balance.
"""
cv_results = cross_validate(
model, X, y,
cv=StratifiedKFold(n_splits=cv, shuffle=True, random_state=42),
scoring=SCORERS,
return_train_score=True,
)
summary = {}
for metric in SCORERS:
test_scores = cv_results[f"test_{metric}"]
summary[metric] = {"mean": test_scores.mean(), "std": test_scores.std()}
# Flag overfitting: large gap between train and test score
train_mean = cv_results[f"train_{metric}"].mean()
summary[metric]["overfit_gap"] = train_mean - test_scores.mean()
return summary
def train_and_log(model, X_train, y_train, X_test, y_test, run_name):
"""Train model and log all artefacts to MLflow."""
with mlflow.start_run(run_name=run_name):
model.fit(X_train, y_train)
proba = model.predict_proba(X_test)[:, 1]
metrics = {
"roc_auc": roc_auc_score(y_test, proba),
"avg_prec": average_precision_score(y_test, proba),
}
mlflow.log_params(model.get_params())
mlflow.log_metrics(metrics)
mlflow.sklearn.log_model(model, "model")
return metrics
# --- Model evaluation checklist ---
# 1. Always report AUC-PR alongside AUC-ROC for imbalanced datasets.
# 2. Check overfit_gap > 0.05 as a warning sign of overfitting.
# 3. Calibrate probabilities (Platt scaling / isotonic) before production use.
# 4. Compute SHAP values to validate feature importance makes business sense.
# 5. Run a baseline (e.g. DummyClassifier) and verify the model beats it.
# 6. Log every run to MLflow — never rely on notebook output for comparison.
import statsmodels.formula.api as smf
def diff_in_diff(df, outcome, treatment_col, post_col, controls=None):
"""
Estimate ATT via OLS DiD with optional covariates.
df must have: outcome, treatment_col (0/1), post_col (0/1).
Returns the interaction coefficient (treatment × post) and its p-value.
"""
covariates = " + ".join(controls) if controls else ""
formula = (
f"{outcome} ~ {treatment_col} * {post_col}"
+ (f" + {covariates}" if covariates else "")
)
result = smf.ols(formula, data=df).fit(cov_type="HC3")
interaction = f"{treatment_col}:{post_col}"
return {
"att": result.params[interaction],
"p_value": result.pvalues[interaction],
"ci_95": result.conf_int().loc[interaction].tolist(),
"summary": result.summary(),
}
# --- Causal inference checklist ---
# 1. Validate parallel trends in pre-period before trusting DiD estimates.
# 2. Use HC3 robust standard errors to handle heteroskedasticity.
# 3. For panel data, cluster SEs at the unit level (add groups= param to fit).
# 4. Consider propensity score matching if groups differ at baseline.
# 5. Report the ATT with confidence interval, not just statistical significance.
references/statistical_methods_advanced.mdreferences/experiment_design_frameworks.mdreferences/feature_engineering_patterns.md# Testing & linting
python -m pytest tests/ -v --cov=src/
python -m black src/ && python -m pylint src/
# Training & evaluation
python scripts/train.py --config prod.yaml
python scripts/evaluate.py --model best.pth
# Deployment
docker build -t service:v1 .
kubectl apply -f k8s/
helm upgrade service ./charts/
# Monitoring & health
kubectl logs -f deployment/service
python scripts/health_check.py
testing
When the user wants to optimize any form that is NOT signup/registration — including lead capture forms, contact forms, demo request forms, application forms, survey forms, or checkout forms. Also use when the user mentions "form optimization," "lead form conversions," "form friction," "form fields," "form completion rate," or "contact form." For signup/registration forms, see signup-flow-cro. For popups containing forms, see popup-cro.
development
Performs financial ratio analysis, DCF valuation, budget variance analysis, and rolling forecast construction for strategic decision-making. Use when analyzing financial statements, building valuation models, assessing budget variances, or constructing financial projections and forecasts. Also applicable when users mention financial modeling, cash flow analysis, company valuation, financial projections, or spreadsheet analysis.
testing
SaaS financial health advisor. Use when a user shares revenue or customer numbers, or mentions ARR, MRR, churn, LTV, CAC, NRR, or asks how their SaaS business is doing.
development
Performs financial ratio analysis, DCF valuation, budget variance analysis, and rolling forecast construction for strategic decision-making. Use when analyzing financial statements, building valuation models, assessing budget variances, or constructing financial projections and forecasts. Also applicable when users mention financial modeling, cash flow analysis, company valuation, financial projections, or spreadsheet analysis.