Brain scans

Jan. 7th, 2008 12:24 pm
tikistitch: (Default)
[personal profile] tikistitch
Were meaning to put a link to this, and just plain forgot. But now every time we see a brain scan image on a news article, we are annoyed anew:

Brain scan images help convince students of almost anything

Recent experiments by CSU and UCLA psychologists show that brain scan images can make even the silliest scientific claims believable to readers.

In three experiments, beginning psychology students were given a supposedly scientific article to read, then asked to rate the credibility of the article's claims. Students were more likely to agree with the conclusions of an article illustrated by brain scan images than they were to agree with the same article illustrated by a bar graph or without images....


Worth reading the whole thing. Bottom line: a lot of science writing is just plain bad. Unfortunately, probably because of the pressures of publication and grant application, there's also some bit of just plain bad science out there. Caveat emptor.

Date: 2008-01-07 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] primalrage.livejournal.com
Link comes up as forbidden.

Date: 2008-01-07 09:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tikistitch.livejournal.com
Forgot a quotey mark! Try again?

Date: 2008-01-08 03:01 am (UTC)
twotone: (insane)
From: [personal profile] twotone
I admit, I only clicked on the links in the hopes that it would have a good picture of a brain scan image that I could use for my own nefarious purposes.

Photobucket

Recent studies show a direct correlation between base happiness levels amongst women aged 21 to 55 and giving [livejournal.com profile] twotone lots of tea and chocolate.

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