There are plenty of constellations in which blinding simply isn’t possible – whether it is that I compare an intravenous drug to an orally taken one, or I compare the use of two different surgical instruments or laboratory analyzers, there are plenty of constellations in which blinding is simply not possible. Yes, blinding makes for better science, but no blinding alone doesn’t make for bad science. The second version of the graphic is also available in: Portuguese (courtesy of Marco Filipe) Russian (courtesy of ) and Spanish, (courtesy of Carolina Jiménez at ). Purchase in A2, A1 & A0 poster sizes here. You can download the previous version as a PDF here. Want to share it elsewhere? See the site’s content usage guidelines. The graphic in this article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Support Compound Interest on Patreon for post previews and more! This is merely intended to provide a rough guide to things to be alert to when either reading science articles or evaluating research.ĮDIT 2 (April 2015): Update to version 3, taking into account a range of feedback and also sprucing up the design a little. Note that this is not a comprehensive overview, nor is it implied that the presence of one of the points noted automatically means that the research should be disregarded. Personally, I think it’s therefore important that people are capable of spotting bad scientific methods, or realising when articles are being economical with the conclusions drawn from research, and that’s what this graphic aims to do. The vast majority of people will get their science news from online news site articles, and rarely delve into the research that the article is based on. This graphic looks at the different factors that can contribute towards ‘bad’ science – it was inspired by the research I carried out for the recent aluminium chlorohydrate graphic, where many articles linked the compound to causing breast cancer, referencing scientific research which drew questionable conclusions from their results. A brief detour from chemistry, branching out into science in general today.
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