Andrew Gelman: What has happened down here is the winds have changed

Andrew Gelman writes:

To understand Fiske’s attitude, it helps to realize how fast things have changed.
As of five years ago—2011—the replication crisis was barely a cloud on the horizon.

Here’s what I see as the timeline of important events:

1960s-1970s: Paul Meehl argues that the standard paradigm of experimental psychology doesn’t work, that “a zealous and clever investigator can slowly wend his way through a tenuous nomological network, performing a long series of related experiments which appear to the uncritical reader as a fine example of ‘an integrated research program,’ without ever once refuting or corroborating so much as a single strand of the network.”

Psychologists all knew who Paul Meehl was, but they pretty much ignored his warnings. For example, Robert Rosenthal wrote an influential paper on the “file drawer problem” but if anything this distracts from the larger problems of the find-statistical-signficance-any-way-you-can-and-declare-victory paradigm.

1960s: Jacob Cohen studies statistical power, spreading the idea that design and data collection are central to good research in psychology, and culminating in his book, Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences, The research community incorporates Cohen’s methods and terminology into its practice but sidesteps the most important issue by drastically overestimating real-world effect sizes.

1971: Tversky and Kahneman write “Belief in the law of small numbers,” one of their first studies of persistent biases in human cognition. This early work focuses on resarchers’ misunderstanding of uncertainty and variation (particularly but not limited to p-values and statistical significance), but they and their colleagues soon move into more general lines of inquiry and don’t fully recognize the implication of their work for research practice.

1980s-1990s: Null hypothesis significance testing becomes increasingly controversial within the world of psychology. Unfortunately this was framed more as a methods question than a research question, and I think the idea was that research protocols are just fine, all that’s needed was a tweaking of the analysis. I didn’t see general airing of Meehl-like conjectures that much published research was useless.

2006: I first hear about the work of Satoshi Kanazawa, a sociologist who published a series of papers with provocative claims (“Engineers have more sons, nurses have more daughters,” etc.), each of which turns out to be based on some statistical error. I was of course already aware that statistical errors exist, but I hadn’t fully come to terms with the idea that this particular research program, and others like it, were dead on arrival because of too low a signal-to-noise ratio. It still seemed a problem with statistical analysis, to be resolved one error at a time.

2008: Edward Vul, Christine Harris, Piotr Winkielman, and Harold Pashler write a controversial article, “Voodoo correlations in social neuroscience,” arguing not just that some published papers have technical problems but also that these statistical problems are distorting the research field, and that many prominent published claims in the area are not to be trusted. This is moving into Meehl territory.

2008 also saw the start of the blog Neuroskeptic, which started with the usual soft targets (prayer studies, vaccine deniers), then started to criticize science hype (“I’d like to make it clear that I’m not out to criticize the paper itself or the authors . . . I think the data from this study are valuable and interesting – to a specialist. What concerns me is the way in which this study and others like it are reported, and indeed the fact that they are repored as news at all,” but soon moved to larger criticisms of the field. I don’t know that the Neuroskeptic blog per se was such a big deal but it’s symptomatic of a larger shift of science-opinion blogging away from traditional political topics toward internal criticism.

2011: Joseph Simmons, Leif Nelson, and Uri Simonsohn publish a paper, “False-positive psychology,” in Psychological Science introducing the useful term “researcher degrees of freedom.” Later they come up with the term p-hacking, and Eric Loken and I speak of the garden of forking paths to describe the processes by which researcher degrees of freedom are employed to attain statistical significance.

Comments:

* Yet Fiske doesn’t seem to have any issue with fluffy TED talks. Apparently TED provides the quality control she mentions.

* Amy Cuddy’s speaker fees are in tier 6–that is, $40,001 and up.

Yikes. Well, that would create a bit of an incentive…

* I would say Fiske isn’t using subterfuge–she’s just incompetent (but a full professor at Princeton!). When incompetence is pointed out, she reacts like an academic–she attempts to silence the source or use ad hominem attacks. But here’s the nice thing–she has to do it publicly, rather than pick up the phone (which is the standard method in academic political science). That’s because she can’t pick up the phone to silence you.

>Look. I’m not saying these are bad people. Sure, maybe they cut corners here or there, or make some mistakes, but those are all technicalities—at least, that’s how I’m guessing they’re thinking. For Cuddy, Norton, and Fiske to step back and think that maybe almost everything they’ve been doing for years is all a mistake . . . that’s a big jump to take. Indeed, they’ll probably never take it. All the incentives fall in the other direction.

Solzhenitsyn says that when you have spent your life establishing a lie, what is required is not equivocation but rather a dramatic self-sacrifice (in relation to Ehrenburg–https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilya_Ehrenburg). I see no chance of that happening in any social science field–tenure means Fiske will be manning (can I use that phrase?) the barricades until they cart her off in her 80’s. Thinking machines will be along in 20-30 years and then universities can dismantle the social sciences and replace them with those.

* Paul Romer, a former academic who now is chief economist at the World Bank thinks that macroecnomics is a science in failure mode, and thinks that this parallels the evolution of science in general. You can read his arguments at:

https://www.law.yale.edu/system/files/area/workshop/leo/leo16_romer.pdf

The gist of it is that economists have cooked up fancy models involving variables that have no measurable counterpart in the real world, and then use these models to draw conclusions that reflect nothing more than the arbitrary assumptions made to identify the model. Not being familiar with the models he criticizes, I can’t assess his claims, but they sound quite plausible. He has been sounding this alarm for quite a while now, and has published numerous papers which you can easily find by Googling the term “mathiness” (which he coined.)

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Steve Sailer’s Weird Hours

The highlight of my day is when Steve Sailer makes a new blog post, which often happens late at night or in the early morning (I live in Los Angeles).

Steve Sailer writes:

The Internet facilitates jeering from the peanut gallery, which does not make professionals with previously comfortable careers happy. For example, a common joke among mainstream media pundits on Twitter is that the Trump campaign is as if the Comments Section were staging a coup against all that is right and holy.

For example, as far as I can tell from what he’s ever said, Donald Trump is pretty much of a true believer of the conventional wisdom on race. But Establishment Pundits appear to be absolutely terrified that Trump actually is aware of those horrible hatestats that keep appearing in their comments sections. Commenters keep quoting government statistics on crime by race and the like, for example, and Trump might.someday.do.that.too.

Similarly, the profession of psychology has been suffering from a Replication Crisis as many famous findings don’t seem to replicate well. Psychologists do not like being reminded of this, and tend to take mentions of this very personally, as this essay by the past president of the Association for Psychological Science suggests.

Comments at Steve Sailer:

* Steve is in the Pacific zone plus as far I know he has to take of his wife (ill) during daylight hours. Doing all his family’s errands in addition to everything else.

* Youtube has just announced their new censorship system for their comments. They call the censors “heroes” and their job will be to flag videos that show thought crime, ahem, I meant hate speech and other such offensive content.

* Susan Fiske is a tenured SJW terrorist (I see her career accomplishments in the social sciences include the always-replicable and wholly-scientific theory of ‘ambivalent sexism’, which will undoubtably be taught to unassuming students via textbook for the next 50+ years and thus further destroy America).

I’m so glad to see that Ms. Fiske, in the spirit of totalitarian and hysterical feminists everywhere, would love nothing more than to censor the Internet and her triggering ‘methodological terrorists’ forevermore.

We’re onto ya, Sue! No more safe spaces!

* I think a big part of the media revolt against the readers is driven by the fact that many of the big foot media types are quite stupid. They are mostly actors today, playing a role that is scripted for them. That’s why they are sounding like comics, talking to one another backstage after a few beers. They hate the fact that have to perform in front of these people.

* Yeah, it’s hard to brainwash people when all your lies can be called out in the comments section. I mean some level of censoring needs to be done. My city has two papers. The comments section of one (the Salt Lake Tribune) is almost 100% leftwing trolls, in a way that does NOT speak well for its readers.

The other (the Mormon Church-owned Deseret News) is ridiculously overcensored in a way that stifles any sort of organic conversation and blocks almost 100% of facts the Mormon Church would prefer for you not to hear. The Deseret News has a full staff of unpaid interns at its disposal – hell, many of its articles are literally written by college sophomores – yet Steve Sailor alone is faster at reading and approving comments. A few years ago a couple of Mormon missionaries were killed when they were run over by a drunk Hispanic man in Texas. They censored any and all comments that pointed out that the perp was an illegal alien.

Newspapers are increasingly concerned about telling you what to think, and comments sections get in the way of that. I will never, ever add a site to my regular reading list that does not allow readers to comment on their output, and quasi-anonymously. It puts pressure on them to stay honest. Hell, I stopped reading NRO when they switched from Disqus to the appalling Facebook comments system.

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WP: New YouTube offensiveness offensive offends users. YouTube disables comments.

Washington Post: YouTube, among others, has tried a variety of tactics, including real-name requirements using Google+, designed to subdue the beast, “flagging” by users to alert its moderators to content for possible removal and an elite corps of “Trusted Flaggers,” which the Google-owned company says “gives users access to more advanced flagging tools as well as periodic feedback, making flagging more effective and efficient.”

All this to modest avail, despite the fact that, as YouTube reports, “over 90 million people have flagged videos on YouTube since 2006 — that’s more than the population of Egypt — and over a third of these people have flagged more than one video.”

So on Thursday it proposed something new, “YouTube Heroes,” essentially a gaming effort to entice users into, among other things, “mass flagging” of offensive content, which would then be reviewed by professionals and removed if warranted. Here’s how it’s supposed to work, according to the YouTube blog post:

YouTube Heroes will have access to a dedicated YouTube Heroes community site that is separate from the main YouTube site, where participants can learn from one another. Through the program, participants will be able to earn points and unlock rewards to help them reach the next level. For example, Level 2 Heroes get access to training through exclusive workshops and Hero hangouts, while Level 3 Heroes who have demonstrated their proficiency will be able to flag multiple videos at a time (something Trusted Flaggers can already do) and help moderate content strictly within the YouTube Heroes Community site.

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Maryland man instructed others ‘like a coach’ during recorded gang rape

Washington Post: The 35-minute audio recording, as described in a Maryland courtroom Thursday, was horrifying.

“Hold her down,” a young man said.

The voice belonged to Cecil Burrows, 23, who was sentenced to 18 months in jail for his role in what prosecutors described as a gang rape of a nearly comatose woman in a townhouse in the Montgomery County community of Olney. Burrows not only recorded the rape, he called out instructions.

cecil-burrows

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The Alt-Right And The Death Of Conservatism

The Daily Caller just published an objective essay on the Alt-Right!

Hillary is correct, though, that this new movement from the right has emerged from the fringes of society. All effective counter-cultural movements do. This is where the deplorables all hang out. It is also where the ideas which are forbidden by the leftist establishment emerge, develop and organise. The alt-right does not have a single philosophy. Instead it is a multi-pronged intellectual attack upon the legitimacy of the ruling establishment in the West. This philosophical diversity is key to its strength.

There are several core tenets of alt-right thinking, however, which unify the different factions within the movement. Key to these is realism when it comes to race, gender, culture and beliefs. Despite the histrionics of the leftist establishment, these views have not been considered controversial historically. For everyone except postmodern Cultural Marxists, it is obvious that there are distinct differences between the races and between the sexes. Some cultures are obviously more successful at creating civilisation than others. If it is sexist that women bear the primary responsibility for raising progeny, then biology is sexist. If it is racist that East Asians have higher IQ’s, lower crime rates and higher incomes than Sub-Saharan Africans, then genetics is racist. Even if reality hurts your feelings, it’s still reality.

It has also been true throughout history that humans prefer their own tribe. Leftists today don’t mind ethnic nationalism, as long as it is not whites adopting it. Why is it that Black Lives Matter, a group associated with domestic terrorism who are clearly ethnic nationalists, are feted at the White House while white nationalists are profiled by the authorities and castigated in the media? Why is the demographic displacement of whites through mass immigration and the destruction of white cultures official government policy in Western countries? Why do we lambast this process as cultural genocide when it was done to indigenous peoples but celebrate it as diversity when it is done to whites?

Common across the component factions of the alt-right movement is also the belief that moral relativism and cultural universalism are destroying the West. Emerging over time from a distortion of the Christian principle of universal brotherhood, this practice by Westerners of denying themselves the right to in-group preference has emboldened our historical enemies and convinced them we are weak. Alt-right thinkers understand that all the aircraft carriers and ICBM’s in the world matter little if a society does not have the cultural confidence to assert its values and promote its identity to foreigners inside and outside its borders. Such a demoralized nation is not long for this world.

Many in the emerging right are former libertarians, and retain the views that the state is never to be trusted and that fascism and national socialism were movements of the left, not the right. The traditional right that these reactionary men and women would revive draws its ideas from such thinkers as Thomas Carlyle, Julius Evola, Bertrand de Jouvenel and Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. They reject majoritarian democracy and advocate formal hierarchy, moral order and the aspiration to higher ideals that metaphysical faith provides societies. They abhor the debased materialism and worship of abstract ideals that characterises modernity. Critics might dismiss this as mere nostalgia; it is not. Instead it is a love for one’s people and the desire to see them be great again. It is more than a political slogan. It is the rekindling of beliefs which many in the West have forgotten.

The alt-right is edgier than conservatism. It is more aggressive and assertive. That’s the point. Right-thinking men and women of the West now have nothing to lose. It is in such circumstances that minds are quickened and hearts are steeled. They see an establishment which is corrupt, degenerate and morally bankrupt. They are not at all interested in conserving it.

Moses Apostaticus is a PhD Candidate (Education) at a major Australian university and is a known voice in the alt-right sphere.

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