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Community for : 4.2 years

The Official Sub for Science
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Anything Science and Scientific is welcomed here.

*Look to other subs like v/all or v/whatever if you wish to post about fictional content.




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6
Thirsty tomatoes emit ultrasonic sounds—and other plants may be listening     (phys.org)
submitted by Spaceman84 to science 2.0 years ago (+6/-0)
3 comments last comment...
6
Erodium Copy robot: Small Robot That Can Reforest The Whole Planet     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by UncleDoug to science 1.4 years ago (+6/-0)
6 comments last comment...
Small robot that can reforest the whole planet
6
Tasting sour.     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by UncleDoug to science 1.4 years ago (+7/-1)
3 comments last comment...
Why Sour May Be The Oldest Taste
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Scientific Misconduct and Fraud: The Final Nail in Psychiatry’s Antidepressant Coffin     (www.counterpunch.org)
submitted by happytoes to science 1.3 years ago (+7/-1)
0 comments...
https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/01/17/scientific-misconduct-and-fraud-the-final-nail-in-psychiatrys-antidepressant-coffin/

This story caught my eye for a different reason from the scientific fraud narrative.

What do we mean when we say that drug A is better than drug B ? Using "drug A" and "drug B" as names clashes with English grammar. In the interests of euphony, I've used a name generator and will call them Aproxin and Benzolax. Here are three different things that we might mean when we say that Aproxin is better than Benzolax because Aproxin works for 40% of patients, but Benzolax only works for 30%.

First meaning: Independent. Some lucky folk respond well to both 0.4 x 0.3 = 12%. Some patients (0.4 x 0.7 = 28%) only respond to Aproxin. Others (0.6 x 0.3 = 18%) only respond to Benzolax. Many (0.6 x 0.7 = 42%) benefit from neither.

Second meaning: Dominant. Hope that you are one of the 40% who respond to Aproxin. That forty percent splits into three quarters who also respond to Benzolax, and one quarter who don't respond to Benzolax. Notice the cunning with which I have contrived the numbers in my made up example. That is all of the 30% who respond to Benzolax accounted for. No-one responds to Benzolax and not to Aproxin. 60% of patients are out of luck. Obviously you try Aproxin first. If it doesn't help, give up. Benzolax has found itself in a context in which it is entirely useless.

Third meaning: Sequential. Weirdly, no-one responds to both drugs. You try Aproxin first. If it doesn't work, you move on to Benzolax. Notice how this messes with the numbers. If 40% respond to Aproxin, that leaves 60% moving on to Benzolax. Half of those who try Benzolax (under this treatment protocol) benefit. That is 50%, up from the 30% who benefited in the old days before Aproxin was discovered.

Notice how the discovery of Aproxin affects the sales of Benzolax. In the Dominant case, Benzolax becomes obsolete. In the Sequential case, a superficial reading/misunderstanding of the numbers makes it look as though the discovery of Aproxin makes Benzolax work better.

So how do you compare drugs? I've noticed that trials generally do a naive random assignment. You get numbers for the effectiveness of each drug as though the other drugs didn't exist. But how do the medicines relate? Independent? Dominant? Sequential? Not one of the extreme cases? The trials don't say. But it does matter for treatment.

At the heart of the article is STAR*D, Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression https://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/epdf/10.1176/ajp.2006.163.11.1905 Some-one has actually gone ahead and tried to measure what happens when you try drugs in sequence. They cheat which is the usual money grubbing of modern science. On the other hand, that are looking at the medically important comparison, which is progress.
6
Paleontological analysis shows renowned fossil thought to show soft tissue preservation is in fact just paint     (phys.org)
submitted by Spaceman84 to science 1.2 years ago (+6/-0)
0 comments...
3
Men and women's brains do work differently     (www.telegraph.co.uk)
submitted by Conspirologist to science 1.2 years ago (+7/-4)
5 comments last comment...
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SIX SOLAR STORMS ON THEIR WAY TO EARTH | S0 News May.10.2024     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to science 1 year ago (+6/-0)
13 comments last comment...
6
Chromosomal aberrations found among people living near cell towers, compared to controls living further away.     (www.microwavenews.com)
submitted by qwop to science 10 months ago (+6/-0)
0 comments...
6
Japanese scientists created mice with two biological fathers by generating eggs from male cells     (archive.is)
submitted by SumerBreeze to science 10 months ago (+6/-0)
12 comments last comment...
https://archive.is/iO1Od

Hopefully the future isn’t as gay as the present.

I imagine the lab experiments will be shunned by normal reproduction humans.
5
Frightening Warning From Black Science Guy Re: Asteroid Impact     (youtube.com)
submitted by TheBigGuyFromQueens to science 5 months ago (+6/-1)
11 comments last comment...
5
Project Looking Glass Whistleblowers     (rumble.com)
submitted by Orthalyx to science 4.2 years ago (+5/-0)
4 comments last comment...
5
Dr Roger Higgs: Global warming and cooling for last 2,000 years mimic Sun’s magnetic activity, not CO2     (electroverse.net)
submitted by Gramman74 to science 4 years ago (+7/-2)
1 comments last comment...
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"If 1 million migrant workers were vaccinated, 126.58 cases of 'Sudden Adult Death Syndrome' would be expected to occur within one day of vaccination as (((coincident))) background cases."     (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
submitted by mememeyou to science 4 years ago (+5/-0)
9 comments last comment...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3748117/

"For some of the other events, such as preterm labour, the numbers of expected events are quite large. Among 1 million vaccinated pregnant women with a stillbirth of 196–258 days, 1,381 preterm labours are predicted to occur within one day after the vaccination."
5
Neuralink co-founder quits weeks after hinting brain-tweaking software could reanimate dinosaurs in Jurassic-Park situation     (www.rt.com)
submitted by Gramman74 to science 4 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...
5
PCR Tests     (i.ibb.co)
submitted by mememeyou to science 3.9 years ago (+5/-0)
0 comments...
5
"Disturbance of the immune system by electromagnetic fields" by Olle Johansson     (therabbithole.wiki)
submitted by LoliNeko to science 3.7 years ago (+6/-1)
1 comments last comment...
http://therabbithole.wiki/disturbance-of-the-immune-system-by-electromagnetic-fields-by-olle-johansson-the-experimental-dermatology-unit-department-of-neuroscience-2009/

A potential in-depth look at how EM fields, now pervasive in daily technology, might have a negative impact on our bodies. I'm not technically adept to dissect its legitimacy, so I'll let you guys give it a shot.
5
Does anyone have the dosing guy for ivermectin to treat Covid-19?     (science)
submitted by NeonGreen to science 3.6 years ago (+6/-1)
15 comments last comment...
Almost everything is censored. I'm just going to take 12 mg to see what happens. I've been sicker than a dog for 10 days and considering some sensitive stuff I'm to nervous to get added as a positive case.
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altruism is genetic. A score of at least 13, used in the MacArthur Civil Psychiatric Study as an indication of “potential psychopathy” (Monahan et al., 2001), was obtained by 1.2% of the total sample, 1.0% of men, 1.2% of women, 1.9% of African Americans, and approximately 1% of Whites     (web.archive.org)
submitted by Garrett to science 3.6 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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A covid crib sheet: 30 facts that disprove the narrative     (off-guardian.org)
submitted by rhy to science 3.5 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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(((5G)))     (mega.nz)
submitted by CPU to science 3.4 years ago (+7/-2)
4 comments last comment...
https://mega.nz/folder/Tf4ymBpA#n6qSf6wk4dBpV9X29rNUFg

Found this, info about electromagnetic radiation and health. Trust the science.
5
Giant phantom jellyfish     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by big_fat_dangus to science 3.4 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...
5
Does male sperm remain in women? Male microchimerism in women without sons     (archive.ph)
submitted by Garrett to science 3.3 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...
5
New "kick and kill" treatment 40% effective at curing HIV in animal models      (www.nature.com)
submitted by big_fat_dangus to science 3.3 years ago (+5/-0)
2 comments last comment...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-27647-0

Or you could just not contract HIV like a fucking degenerate lol. Still though, cool technology.
5
Amygdala overgrowth that occurs in autism spectrum disorder may begin during infancy     (www.nih.gov)
submitted by Spaceman84 to science 3.1 years ago (+5/-0)
4 comments last comment...
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Nevertheless, without using prior information about the origins of individuals, we identified six main genetic clusters, five of which correspond to major geographic regions, and subclusters that often correspond to individual populations     (archive.ph)
submitted by Garrett to science 3.1 years ago (+5/-0)
1 comments last comment...