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darkChozo

Member since: Feb 25th, 2008

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Joystiq2 Comments

Stay at home: Amazon's incredible Black Friday deals (and Newegg, too)

Nov 28th 2008 10:04PM (Joystiq)
I managed to snag a couple, and there was an upper limit of three. And before you ask, no, I'm not going to be selling any of them for profit; they're for friends.

Science says: FPS players enjoy getting shot

Feb 25th 2008 7:00PM (Joystiq)
Actually, scientific studies in themselves are generally fairly unbiased. Assuming we're talking about genuine ones (ie. following the scientific method, not of the biased industry-sponsored variety), they will provide a procedure, hypothesis, etc, and the data. They may draw some conclusions from the data, but they're usually of the less sensationalist type (in other words, there is a correlation between higher scores and the psychosis test and less anxiety vs. those who felt less anxiety were psychotic).

What usually happens is that the media takes the summary of the data, and draws unfounded conclusions for a better story. It just doesn't look quite as good to have a bunch of observations that are in no way, shape, or form conclusive. Instead, things are blown way out of proportion; causation (x causes y) is substituted for correlation (x is seen at the same time as y), and sensationalist lines like "playing Halo makes you psychotic" are born (speaking of which, the other summary of the study that I've seen makes no mention of this little attention grabber).

Now, I'm not saying that real scientists don't make exaggerated claims in order to get more money. In any profession, you're going to find people who mix in a little marketing where it doesn't belong. However, consider this before you make sweeping statements about science: you've just read a summary of a summary of a summary. The actual research isn't even available for free. I'd be willing to bet that if you go into the conclusions of the scientist, they never say anything that is quite as sensationalist. It's more likely that they make some tenuous arguments that is based on the data, which in turn was taken by the media, who drew its own paper-selling (or eyeball-grabbing, depending on your style) conclusions. Once again, the report isn't available for free, so if you happen to have access, feel free to correct me. Otherwise, stop making wild claims based on limited knowledge of the case at hand.

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