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Pink, Blue, and Bad Science

DocDJ writes "Ben Goldacre writes an excellent column in The Guardian called Bad Science, which regularly demonstrates how poor the mainstream media are at reporting science. He recently pointed out the flaws in the reporting of research that purported to show the evolutionary basis of 'blue for boys, pink for girls'." Another Guardian writer, Zoe Williams, has an even more acerbic take on the research.

4 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. Is the problem the media, or the research? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    On the one hand, the media is definitely at fault for overhyping every burp and gurgle coming from medical research. An old amino acid causes an unexpected hypertrophy of T-cells? OMFG! It's teh cure for cancer!

    On the other hand, grants seem to awarded to any post-doc with an itch to scratch. The problem is that most of those idiots (for want of a better term) can't tell the difference between the itchiness caused by an ingrown ass-hair and the ass-hair itself. That's what Zoe's ripping on in her article.

    There's something to be said for "pure research" which theoretically expands our collective knowledge. Without pure research, we wouldn't have found penicillin, US America, or bread-yeast. However, I can't even begin to understand what kind of expectations the grant awarders had when they supported "Boys like blue, Girls like pink" research.

    For a couple bucks, the researchers could have just as well satisfied their itch with a tube of Preparation H.

  2. Re:Science Journalism - Thumbs Down by TheMeuge · · Score: 5, Interesting

    About 6 years ago, I was working in a virology lab, where one of the post-docs was doing some anthropological virology and investigating the possibility that one of the last extinctions was the result of a pandemic.

    Discovery Channel did a 30-minute segment about this, which I decided not to participate in, and will be happy not to have done so till the end of my days. When I saw the final product a couple months later, I just sat with my mouth open for about 20 minutes... because I couldn't figure out whether I've been an idiot and couldn't figure out what my colleague was doing until I saw the segment, or the editors/journalists massacred the subject to the point that the research was rendered unrecognizable within the mounts of selectively quoted pseudo-science bullshit.

  3. Why should they report science accurately? by tompaulco · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Whenever I watch a news story about something which I know something about, I find that they are inaccurate or misrepresentative. Interestingly, I find that even though I KNOW they have facts wrong on every single occasion that they reported on something I had knowledge of, it doesn't seem to shake me from accepting as accurate the items they report on of which I have NO knowledge. I believe this to be the case with most people.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  4. Re:pure guesswork on my part.. by david_thornley · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, males (if old enough) want to see females naked, while females don't seem to have the same desire to see males naked. Observe the dress of the sexes in Western cultures: the standard formal male dress leaves hands and head (not including neck) exposed, and everything else covered; females normally expose more skin, and sometimes much more. In business casual wear, a woman can expose quite a bit of leg, while men are required to wear long pants. Women can have lower necklines than men, too.

    Also, observe men's and women's magazines. Men's magazines often show scantily-clad good-looking women on the cover, which makes some sort of sense to me, but so do many women's magazines. I don't understand why (not that I'm complaining when I'm stuck in a slow checkout line at the supermarket).

    Therefore, as long as we're throwing out strange ideas, here's one: the natural state of a man in Western culture is clothed while the natural state of a woman in Western culture is at least less clothed. The dominant skin color in Western culture is pink (sometimes misstated as "white"), so the standard clothes suggest naked girls and clothed boys.

    The observations in the first two paragraphs are correct, as far as I can tell, and the standard colors for little boys and little girls are blue and pink, at least in the US. I'm not giving out any warranties on the reasoning and conclusion, though.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes