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Science Friday

P-Hacking, Quackery, Growing Greater Grains. Mar 2, 2018, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Natural Sciences, Wnyc, Science, Friday, Life Sciences

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 2 March 2018

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you like to read about the psychology around food and eating, you’ve probably come across stories based on research from Cornell’s Food and Brand Lab, directed by Brian Wansink. In an article published this week by Buzzfeed News, science reporter Stephanie Lee reports on a history of shoddy research practices in the lab, and a chain of emails that indicates a practice of “p-hacking”—a statistical wrangling of data aimed at making a borderline result appear to be statistically significant. Lee discusses her reporting with Ira, and talks about the challenge of reproducibility in scientific research. Having trouble warding off that weight gain? Have you tried taking some tapeworm eggs? Got a troublesome toothache? Consider cocaine. Swollen joints? Slather on some snake oil. In the new book Quackery:A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything, authors Lydia Kang and Nate Pederson survey a medicine chest’s worth of quacks through the ages, and employ modern-day scientific evidence to evaluate their efficacy. The grain sorghum might not seem familiar to many in the U.S.—but it’s the fifth most important cereal grown in the world. It’s a common human food ingredient in Africa and parts of Asia, and is often used in the U.S. for animal feed or for ethanol production. Now, researchers report that they’ve identified the pathway in one mutant strain of the grain that allows that variety to produce three times as many seeds per plant as regular sorghum.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. A bit later in the hour, medical cures from the olden days like the radioactive jockstrap.

0:09.1

And no, don't try that one at home. But first, if you like to read about the psychology around food and eating, you've probably come across stories based on research from the famous Cornell Food and Brand Lab.

0:23.0

Over the years, the lab has published many studies that have caught the eye of the media, including Science Friday,

0:29.4

from using a magically refilling soup bowl to help study portion sizes,

0:34.9

to work involving the effect of plate size on meals, to

0:39.0

investigating how the pricing of meals and wine affect the perceptions of the people consuming

0:44.4

them.

0:45.1

But the glass may be half empty.

0:47.3

In an article published this week by BuzzFeed News, science reporter Stephanie Lee reports

0:52.8

on a history of shoddy research practices in the lab

0:56.2

and a chain of emails that indicates a practice of pehacking.

1:01.4

That's a statistical wrangling of data aimed at making a borderline result appear to be statistically

1:07.9

significant.

1:09.3

Stephanie Lee joins us from KQED in San Francisco.

1:12.6

Welcome to Science Friday.

1:14.9

Hi, thanks for having me.

1:16.1

You're welcome.

1:16.8

Can we set the scene first?

1:18.3

First, what is this lab?

1:19.6

What are some of the studies people would have heard of, for example?

1:24.0

Right.

1:24.5

So you've probably heard that eating off a small plate makes you feel full or faster,

...

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