Saturday, May 18, 2013

Closed Thinking

Without scientific competition and open debate, much psychology research goes nowhere

Without scientific competition and open debate, much psychology research goes nowhere

By Bruce Bower

Web edition: May 16, 2013
Print edition: June 1, 2013; Vol.183 #11 (p. 26)

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Credit: James Porto/Getty Images, James Group Studios/iStockphoto, adapted by S. Egts

In its idealized form, science resembles a championship boxing match. Theories square off, each vying for the gold belt engraved with ?Truth.? Under the stern eyes of a host of referees, one theory triumphs by best explaining available evidence ? at least until the next bout.

But in the real world, science sometimes works more like a fashion show. Researchers clothe plausible explanations of experimental findings in glittery statistical suits and gowns. These gussied-up hypotheses charm journal editors and attract media coverage with carefully orchestrated runway struts, never having to battle competitors.

Then there?s psychology. Even more than other social scientists ? and certainly more than physical scientists ? psychologists tend to overlook or dismiss hypotheses that might topple their own, says Klaus Fiedler of the University of Heidelberg in Germany. They explain experimental findings with ambiguous terms that make no testable predictions at all; they build careers on theories that have never bested a competitor in a fair scientific fight. In many cases, no one knows or bothers to check how much common ground one theory shares with others that address the same topic. Problems like these, Fiedler and his colleagues contended last November in Perspectives in Psychological Science, afflict sets of related theories about such psychological phenomena as memory and decision making. In the end, that affects how well these phenomena are understood.

Fiedler?s critique comes at a time when psychologists are making a well-publicized effort to clean up their research procedures, as described in several reports published alongside his paper. In fact, researchers generally concede that many published psychology studies have been conducted in ways that conceal their statistical frailty ? and thus the validity of their conclusions. But Fiedler suspects the new push to sanitize psychology?s statistical house won?t make much difference in the long run. Findings published in big-time journals draw enough media coverage to bring the scrutiny of other researchers, who eventually expose bogus and overblown effects. ?Advances in psychology will depend more on open-minded theoretical thinking than on better monitoring of statistical practices,? he says.

Alternative blindness

When Fiedler gives talks to groups of psychologists, he tries to identify open-minded theoretical thinkers by posing a couple of questions.

First, he asks audience members to name a published study in which investigators uncovered an interesting, statistically significant effect that vanished in later reports. In a seminar conducted last year by Fiedler at a major Dutch university, 38 research psychologists had no problem citing flash-in-the-pan findings. Many remembered a well-known but now contested report that college students react to subtle reminders of old age by walking more slowly, allegedly because healthy young people unconsciously act out prompted stereotypes of the elderly (SN: 5/19/12, p. 26).

In that experiment, student volunteers were timed walking down a corridor after unscrambling sentences that, for one group, contained senior citizen?related words such as wrinkle and Florida. Researchers who conducted the investigation concluded that students weren?t aware of having registered the stereotypical words, but still acted out an elderly stereotype by slowing their pace shortly after the reading exercise.

But researchers did not consider the possibility that their facial expressions or body language might subtly have encouraged the student volunteers to walk more slowly. They didn?t ask themselves whether some students noticed elder-related words while unscrambling sentences and supposed that experimenters wanted them to mimic seniors. They did not explore whether some students quickly drew conclusions about what was expected of them and how to behave, regardless of any unintended signals from experimenters. Nor did they examine whether reading words related to any upsetting or thought-provoking topic would make people walk more slowly.

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A DIFFERENCE IN BEHAVIOR

One psychological theory proposes that symbols of death make individuals aware of their own mortality and lead them to adopt more cautious behaviors. Klaus Fiedler suggests that many other factors (bottom) might also cause self-awareness and similarly conservative behaviors.

Credit: S. Egts

Fiedler?s point: Blindness to additional, possibly superior, explanations for experimental results plagues even prominent psychological theories. ?Psychologists too often fail to consider that the truth may be broader than their hypotheses,? says psychologist Barbara Spellman of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Spellman edits the journal Perspectives in Psychological Science, in which Fiedler?s article appears.

And indeed, as in other seminars Fiedler has run, only a few of the psychologists at the Dutch seminar came up with anything when they were asked to name an experiment that included a competing account for any set of results.

Null and void

Geoffrey Loftus, a psychologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, is an ally in Fiedler?s battle to broaden psychology?s perspectives. As editor of Memory & Cognition from 1993 to 1997, Loftus implored researchers to avoid a standard statistical practice in psychology known as null hypothesis significance testing that, in his view, perpetuates theoretical chaos. He continued to attack the practice in a talk last November at the Psychonomic Society?s annual meeting in Minneapolis.

Null hypothesis refers to a default position: that there is no relationship except chance between two measured phenomena in an experiment (for example, it?s only by chance that college students walk at different speeds after they?ve read words that refer to old age). To conclude that there are grounds to say that a relationship exists between two phenomena, the null hypotheses must be rejected. This technique requires researchers to calculate whether an assumption that no experimental effect exists can be rejected as statistically unlikely based on measured differences between groups.

This is a statistical charade, Loftus contends, since measures taken before and after any test are virtually never the same. Rejecting a null hypothesis doesn?t tell a researcher anything new, even if the threat of finding an effect that doesn?t really exist has been eliminated. ?Significance testing is all about how the world isn?t,? Loftus contends, ?and says nothing about how the world is.?

The art of theory construction in psychology has withered during the field?s 50-year romance with null hypothesis significance testing, asserts psychologist Gerd Gigerenzer of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin: ?The problem is not that researchers think that theory is irrelevant, but that almost anything passes as a theory.?

Gigerenzer has identified three types of theory substitutes in psychology. Each surrogate for theory is so vague and prediction-free that it can?t be proven wrong.

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No swapping

Psychologist Walter Mischel suggests that psychologists often operate in isolation without trying to integrate related theories: ?Psychologists treat other people?s theories like toothbrushes ? no self-respecting person wants to use anyone else?s.?

Credit: Letizia McCall/Getty Images

First, Gigerenzer says, investigators sometimes explain their findings by using a term for a theory that can be construed to explain not only an observed effect but also its opposite. Consider ?representativeness,? which many decision researchers use to explain gamblers? frequent intuition that, after landing on a series of red spaces on a roulette table, they?re going to land on a black space. In this case, psychologists interpret representativeness to mean that people assume that random sequences of two outcomes are best represented by a short sequence containing both: reds and blacks when playing roulette, or heads and tails when flipping a coin.

Yet investigators have also used representativeness to explain the opposite intuition, in which people assume that a streak of outcomes is likely to continue. Sports fans demonstrate this kind of intuition when they attribute ?hot hands? to basketball players who make several shots in a row (SN: 2/12/11, p. 26). The fans expect the players to sink their next try. In this case, representativeness is interpreted to mean that people regard a run of scores as characteristic of a larger random sequence containing streaks of scores and misses.

Another theory-avoiding tactic consists of describing a finding without trying to explain it, Gigerenzer says. The phrase ?inequality aversion? has been applied in some studies to describe the willingness of subjects to divide a pot of money equally rather than to find some other way to divide it. Inequality aversion addresses how participants behaved, but it makes no prediction about why they behaved that way.

Perhaps the most popular theory surrogates are two-system theories. Many psychologists now assume that we make decisions using two mental systems: System 1, in which we make quick, intuitive decisions based on fallible rules of thumb, and System 2, in which we make logical, deliberate choices that require more time and brain power. Psychologist Daniel Kahneman of Princeton University, a Nobel laureate in economics, has done the most to popularize the System 1/System 2 distinction.

Gigerenzer contends that almost any behavior in a decision-making study can be attributed to either System 1 or System 2. In the January 2011 Psychological Review, he and psychologist Arie Kruglanski of the University of Maryland in College Park argued that intuitive and deliberate judgments alike are based on shared rules of thumb, or heuristics. Many parents intuitively allocate attention and love equally to all of their children, for instance, and many investors deliberately follow the same simple rule by allocating money equally to all of their chosen stocks to reduce risk (SN: 6/4/11, p. 26).

Dividing the mind into a nebulous split between intuitive heuristics and logical rule-following distracts scientists from exploring how heuristics operate in both intuitive and deliberative ways and in what situations heuristics work best, Gigerenzer argues.

Toothbrush culture

None of this is to say that psychology has no genuine theories, but many of them exist in splendid isolation. Most psychologists work in narrow communities, such as developmental psychology and social psychology, where established theories are rarely challenged. As a quotation cited in 2008 by psychologist Walter Mischel of Columbia University in New York City puts it, ?Psychologists treat other people?s theories like toothbrushes ? no self-respecting person wants to use anyone else?s.? That kind of professional isolationism leads to ?theoretical disorganization,? write Eli Finkel of Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., and Paul Eastwick of the University of Texas at Austin.

In a chapter in an upcoming book, Finkel and Eastwick discuss theories about how men and women are attracted to each other. One popular theory holds that people are attracted to others who satisfy general needs for pleasure, belonging and a few other social prizes. A second approach posits that people have evolved certain types of mating strategies over the past few million years. A third perspective assumes that individuals form relationship styles early in life with parents and others that orchestrate choices of romantic partners decades later.

Finkel and Eastwick propose that all three approaches can be organized around a principle, developed in related research, that attraction depends on how well one person enables another to achieve urgent goals for pleasure, reproduction, a good relationship fit ? or anything else. Research grounded in that principle has the potential to produce a unified theory of attraction.

Opportunities to unify related theories often arise when scientists from different disciplines collaborate on studies of broad topics such as decision making or moral behavior, Gigerenzer says. He heads a team of scientists with backgrounds ranging from ecology to economics that studies heuristic reasoning. Members of this group have found commonalities between a complex model of thinking and decision making developed by psychologist John Anderson of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and a simple decision-making rule that is surprisingly effective in certain situations.

The rule goes like this: If an experimental subject is asked to make a choice where one of two options is recog?nized, the subject will pick the familiar item. In studies of German and U.S. students, each group did better at identifying the larger city from pairs of choices in foreign countries than from pairs in their homelands. Partial ignorance about foreign cities led the students to choose the most familiar city. Since better-known cities tend to be especially large ones, the students? simple tactic worked surprisingly well. Recognition-guided choices weren?t an option for pairs of familiar cities in students? native lands.

Full disclosure

For decades, popular research tools, from statistical methods to computers, have been proposed as models of how people think. Once a research tool gains traction as a theory of the mind ? say, the notion of the mind as an information-processing computer ? creative thinking about alternative theories becomes increasingly difficult, Gigerenzer says.

That may be so, but psychologist Uri Simonsohn of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia believes that the researchers? efforts to upgrade statistical practices can coexist with hypothesis competition and theory integration.

In a 2011 paper in Psychological Science that has become a manifesto for those aiming to minimize published results that vanish on closer inspection, Simonsohn and his colleagues recommended ways to discourage researchers from cherry-picking data to include in final reports, altering experimental conditions that don?t work as planned and using other tactics that disguise statistical weakness.

Some researchers propose using a statistical technique known as Bayesian analysis that estimates which of several hypotheses best explains a set of results. But despite the strengths of Bayesian statistics, investigators can still exclude inconvenient data or hypotheses from this approach, Simonsohn holds.

In the end, no statistical procedure can thrust psychological research into the championship ring, where losses sting but unexpected wins reap big rewards, Fiedler says. In scientific cultures that encourage clear predictions and open debate, even vanquished predictions get respect for having helped to advance knowledge.

?It is a good morning exercise for a research scientist to discard a pet hypothesis every day before breakfast,? the late ethologist Konrad Lorenz wrote. ?It keeps him young.?



The lesson of Clever Hans


Karl Krall

Any scientist will admit that unconscious cuing by an experimenter can introduce bias into testing. A German named William von Osten and his horse Hans unwittingly demonstrated that ? and inspired the term Clever Hans effect. Von Osten became famous in 1891 for public displays of Hans? ability to perform mathematical calculations and other feats by tapping his hoof. No cheating was apparent, but in 1907 psychologist Oskar Pfungst investigated claims about Hans? intelligence. Pfungst had different experimenters ask questions standing at varying distances from Hans. Sometimes Hans wore blinders; sometimes the experimenters knew the answers to their own questions and sometimes they didn?t. Pfungst discovered not only that Hans needed visual contact with the questioner but also that Hans couldn?t answer a question when the experimenter didn?t know the answer. Conclusion: Although questioners were not consciously cuing Hans to start or stop tapping, their facial expressions or involuntary movements were enough for Clever Hans to catch on.? ? Bruce Bower

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/350464/title/Closed_Thinking

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Chefs cook, raise money for Boston bombing victims

BOSTON (AP) ? Boston Marathon bombing victims joined hundreds of first responders and well-wishers at Fenway Park as dozens of top chefs served fine food and drinks from concession stands in a project intended to raise money for those killed and wounded in the twin explosions.

The Boston Bites Back event at the Boston Red Sox's home, the oldest baseball park in the major leagues, was held Wednesday, a month after the April 15 attack in which two pressure cookers filled with explosives and shrapnel exploded near the marathon's finish line. Three people were killed and more than 260 others were injured.

About 100 chefs served fine wine and fancy food to attendees as they attempted to raise $1 million for One Fund Boston, a charity set up to help the bombing victims, many of whom lost limbs.

Emergency workers, bombing victims and government officials were among those feasting on some 60,000 hors d'oeuvres, including ceviche shots, seared duck breast, oysters, foie gras, spring seafood salad, pastrami sandwiches and other dishes. It was quite a change from the usual pretzels, hot dogs and candy offered at the ballpark.

Bombing victim Lee Ann Yanni, who broke one of her legs in the attack and was still on crutches, attended the event with her husband, Nicholas Yanni, who also was injured.

"As somebody that was significantly injured but luckier than some, it really, truly means a lot that other people are willing to help us just to get back to normal life," Lee Ann Yanni said.

The chefs, who donated the food and wine, cooked and served guests for four hours from behind Fenway's concession stands and at tables throughout the Big Concourse and the park's Budweiser deck.

Five thousand tickets were available at $200 each, entitling people to eat and drink as much as they wished; 200 VIP tickets were offered at $1,000 each, with access to a more intimate and exclusive gathering at the ballpark's EMC Club. An online auction before the event featured packages including unique dining experiences from top chefs and personal shopping with fashion expert Gretta Monahan.

Boston Bites Back was spearheaded by celebrity chefs Ken Oringer, who owns six popular restaurants in the city, and Ming Tsai, a creator of the East-meets-West movement and a media producer. Others behind the initiative include Gov. Deval Patrick, the Red Sox and food service provider Aramark.

Organizers described Boston Bites Back as a "once-in-a-lifetime tasting event" that demonstrates the city's unrelenting spirit while raising money for those affected by the bombings.

The victims have suffered and struggled since the attack, Oringer said.

"A lot of them lost limbs, a lot of them are not gonna be able to work again, a lot of them have families," he said at the event. "We just want to do what we can as a community ... to help them out."

Ming said that Boston Bites Back was not a celebration but an opportunity to share great food and drink, thank first responders and "show these survivors how much we love them."

"One thing that's cool about this event at Fenway Park: we are cooking in the concession stands," Ming said. "Here, for example, from Blue Dragon, we're doing this braised octopus with Ma-La oil with vinegar fries. And over there, we have lobster corn dogs and lobster BLTs, we have pizza, we have seared foie gras. We have amazing food that's never been served at Fenway Park."

That excitement was shared by Lee Ann Yanni.

"I've tried the asparagus soup and it was actually excellent," she said. "I'm highly looking forward to the desserts because that's my thing."

For Laura Wilson-Mills, a nurse who treated bombing victims at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston Bites Back gave her a new perspective and a healthy dose of satisfaction.

"To see them now," she said, "they are real, they have real lives, they have families. ... It also makes me feel good that I've helped not only the patient, but their family."

___

Rodrique Ngowi can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/ngowi

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chefs-cook-raise-money-boston-bombing-victims-064910313.html

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Runners, Maximize Running Performance with Drills . . . This Saturday

Thanks to Alpine?s running specialist,?Kristi Moore, MSPT, for this informative article. Runner?s take note! Drills can take your running to new levels.

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If you want to improve as a runner and prevent injury, you need to do more than just run.? Running drills can be a great way to help you do both.? Running drills provide dynamic flexibility, strength training specific to running, and will help to improve your running form.? What does this mean?? You become a more efficient runner with less risk of injury.? As a Physical Therapist I use drills as a way to assess how a runner moves, to see imbalances within movement, and as a way to rehabilitate runners from injury.

Dynamic flexibility is moving joints and muscles to gain active mobility, which helps you to loosen up effectively before running.? Drills often take you through a larger range of the motions you would normally do in running.? Using bigger range of motion for repetitions warms up your muscles to get ready for running.

Drills work specific muscle groups utilized in running by exaggerating motions used in running.? This leads to improved recruitment of these muscles when we need them during running.? Drills are often quick and/or powerful movements, which will train muscles to respond quickly when running and may even help to push you quicker to a finish line.

Many of the drills highlight one or more aspect of proper running form and are accentuated? through repetitive motions, thus helping you to insert it into your typical running mechanics.? A runner needs to have proper form as well as the appropriate strength and flexibility to allow their body to run without risking injury. Each individual has specific areas to work on with strengthening? and stretching exercises, but drills take it to the next level.

One example of how a drill can address these three areas is high knee skipping.? This drill is a dynamic stretch for hip extensors, a strengthening exercise for calf muscles and quadriceps, and it improves your form by having you push off your foot closer to the mid/fore foot instead of striking with your heel.? There are similar benefits to the majority of running drills.

To learn more about drills come to?Alpine Physical Therapy?s?Free Drills session on Saturday May 18th?at 8:30 am?at the dirt track off the Kim Williams trail.? We will demonstrate correct form with drills, explain their purpose and have you go through some beneficial drills that will improve your running. ? The first 25 people to arrive will also get a free stainless steel water bottle.? If you have any questions please call our north clinic at (406) 541-2606.

Source: http://healthandfitness101.com/?p=3809&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=runners-maximize-running-performance-with-drills-this-saturday

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Invasive frogs may spread deadly amphibian fungus

Imported African species implicated in B. dendrobatidis epidemic

Imported African species implicated in B. dendrobatidis epidemic

By Susan Milius

Web edition: May 16, 2013

More evidence has just dropped into place suggesting that frogs once imported to the United States for pregnancy testing could have spread a fungus deadly to many native amphibian species.

From about the 1940s into the 1970s, medical labs tested for pregnancy-associated hormonal changes by injecting human urine into readily available and easy-to-work-with African clawed frogs. If a woman was pregnant, traces of hormones in her urine would accelerate egg development in the frog.

Frogs sometimes escaped or were set free, allowing African clawed frogs to get a foothold in North America.

A new study using museum specimens of free-living African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) collected in California finds that three out of 23 carried the dread fungus nicknamed Bd, says amphibian ecologist Vance Vredenburg of San Francisco State University. This species doesn?t succumb itself, but it can spread the fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, to more vulnerable neighbors.

The fungus also showed up in about 3 percent of 178 specimens of six Xenopus species collected in Africa as far back as the 1930s, researchers reported May 15 in PLOS ONE. But it cannot be determined whether the strain in the African specimens matches that in the California frogs. Such a match would strongly suggest an African origin for the worldwide fungal epidemic.

The raging Bd fungus is now blamed for wiping out, or causing declines in, about 200 species of amphibians around the world. ?It?s just shocking,? Vredenburg says. He?s observed two kinds of yellow-legged frogs in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks dwindle from 500 populations in 1997 to just 12 in 2012.

Where the fungus that is blamed for this amphibian Armageddon originated and how it spread has inspired plenty of ideas. The fungus may have hitchhiked out of Africa, or out of Asia. And in their travels, milder strains of the fungus may have hybridized to create a more virulent form of the fungus. ?We still don?t have a unified story that we?re all behind,? Vredenburg says.

In any case, the trade in African clawed frogs has clearly helped move Bd around the world, says Matthew Fisher of the Imperial College School of Public Health in London. He and colleagues have shown that African Xenopus frogs in a zoo breeding facility passed the infection to other animals that were later released on the island of Majorca. ?It's not hard to believe that this has happened in the USA as?well,? he says.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/350494/title/Invasive_frogs_may_spread_deadly_amphibian_fungus

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Exclusive: Roche exploring sale of diabetes device unit

By Jessica Toonkel

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding AG is exploring a sale of its blood glucose meters business, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday, as the industry grapples with increased competition and reimbursement pressure.

The discussions about a potential sale of the Roche unit are still in their early stages and a deal may not materialize, one of the people said.

Earlier this year, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced it was cutting the reimbursement for diabetes test supplies by up to 72 percent. That would make it more difficult for companies to be profitable in this space, said another of the sources.

The change takes effect July 1.

It could not be learned how much the Roche unit was worth. All the sources wished to remain anonymous because the matter is not public. A Roche spokesman declined to comment.

Last year, Bayer AG, Germany's biggest drugmaker, attempted to sell its blood glucose meter business for around $1.5 billion, only to pull the plug on the sale early this year after failing to find sufficient buyer interest.

There are only a handful of companies that sell blood glucose meters, including Medtronic Inc and Johnson & Johnson, that would make logical buyers, two of the people said.

(Reporting By Jessica Toonkel, Editing by Soyoung Kim)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-roche-exploring-sale-diabetes-device-unit-194338405.html

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While Glass is flying under the radar at I/O, Google has announced that CNN, Elle, Twitter, Tumblr,

While Glass is flying under the radar at I/O, Google has announced that CNN, Elle, Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and Evernote are joining the "Glassware" fray. Previously, only Path and The New York Times were the only other apps available for Glass.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/B_JwdJ_1S98/while-glass-is-flying-under-the-radar-at-i-o-google-ha-507598884

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All The Recurring Jokes in Arrested Development, Visualized

Watch enough Arrested Development?I mean, is there really such a thing as enough??and you become party to a long and intricate series of recurring jokes. Now, you can feast your eyes on an interactive visualization that lets you take a closer look at where the gags crop up.

So, whether its references to building houses in Iraq or awkwardness between George Michael and Maeby, you can see where all the jokes crop up, episode by episode. Or flip it on its head and look at which themes appear in a particular episode. Put together by Beutler Ink and Red Edge, it's easy enough to navigate, so go check it out here. A warning, though: it will leave you wanting to fire up Netflix. [Recurring Developments via Flowing Data]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/all-the-recurring-jokes-in-arrested-development-visual-506545880

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