Tag: studies
Researchers Threaten Guys’ Masculinity, Then Watch Them Compensate With Lies

Researchers Threaten Guys’ Masculinity, Then Watch Them Compensate With Lies

By Erik Lacitis, The Seattle Times (TNS)

SEATTLE — Pity the male of the species.

It’s so easy to threaten his masculinity, then watch him try to compensate by simply lying about himself.

“Manning Up” is a recent research paper headed by Sapna Cheryan, a University of Washington associate professor in psychology.

It begins in a rather unusual manner for an academic study — by quoting from Johnny Cash’s 1969 hit, “A Boy Named Sue.” The one that goes, “Some gal would giggle and I’d get red … ”

Then the study catalogs the reactions from guys the researchers duped into feeling masculinity-impaired through phony results from grip and personality tests.

The sampling was a bunch of college undergrads recruited at a dorm in exchange for $3 gift cards.

The students:

Lie about their height. Lie about their number of sexual partners. Lie about how handy they are. Lie about their athleticism.

For example: The “non-threatened” undergrad group said in follow-up questions that they had had an average 1.76 sexual relationships in their lives.

The “threatened” ones said they had had an average 3.12 encounters. That’s a 77 percent increase.

The study was a bit more diplomatic, not using “lie” but “exaggerating.”

The study also concluded that guys who feel masculinity-impaired also distance themselves from what they perceive as girl stuff.

Go to a basketball game? Yes. Go to a body spa? No way.

Movie and popcorn, yes. Watching a dance ensemble? Ha.

Home Depot, yes. Banana Republic? Hmmm, no thanks.

“Guys don’t relate to going shopping for clothes,” says Cheryan.

And the study showed something else: how gullible we all can be, if a test looks scientific enough.

The undergrads, all from Stanford University, which is where Cheryan was when the research was done, fell for a couple phony tests, with phony results, that made them believe their masculinity was in question.

In one test, the 36 guys were told the strength of their grip would be measured.

They squeezed on something called a Jamar Handgrip Dynamometer, which had a meter attached, kind of like on a bike pump.

“We couldn’t even read it,” Cheryan says about the meter. It didn’t matter. It just had to look science-y.

Then the guys were shown phony results.

One group was told they scored right in the middle for a masculine score.

But another group was shown a bogus bell curve that placed their grip strength similar to that of a woman.

Let that sink in, 20-year-old male undergrad.

In the other test, guys were given multiple-choice questions to supposedly measure their “masculinity compared to those of other men.”

For example, they were asked whether they’d prefer to drive a Honda Civic, Ford Taurus, Toyota Camry or Volvo C70.

The questions were designed “so that no answer was obviously masculine,” according to the paper.

One group of guys was told they had scored 73, and that the median score for a guy was 72. These guys didn’t exaggerate later.

And then there was the other group, who were told they had scored … 26.

No, no, no, 26! What?

And so the lying began from the masculinity-threatened guys.

Cheryan points out that everyone knows their height — from a driver’s license or filling out various forms. The researchers had the actual height measurements for the subjects.

The threatened guys “exaggerated their height by three-quarters of an inch,” Cheryan said. Not so with the non-threatened guys.

By the way, government figures show the average American male in his 20s is 5 feet 9.4 inches tall. Six feet and over puts you in the top 20 percentile.

The threatened guys also exaggerated their handiness by 16 percent when asked questions such as, “How handy are you with tools?”

They also exaggerated their athleticism and their aggressiveness by some 25 percent.

But you women who log onto OK Cupid are familiar with all that.

Cheryan said she does feel a bit sorry for the male species.

As other researchers have put it about masculinity, she says, “Hard won, easily lost.”

Photo: He’s actually really strong. Can deadlift 100 pounds. Brian Auer/Flickr

Study Of Views On Gay Marriage Retracted By Journal Science

Study Of Views On Gay Marriage Retracted By Journal Science

By Eryn Brown and Monte Morin, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES — Laura Gardiner knew she was making a difference with her work.

As national mentoring coordinator at the Los Angeles LGBT Center’s Leadership Lab, she and her colleagues had toiled to train 1,000 volunteers who had fanned out across Los Angeles and beyond, lobbying voters in precincts that had cast ballots against gay rights.

The idea was to push back against prejudice, house by house — and over the years, the group’s internal evaluations indicated, the Leadership Lab had gotten quite good at changing voter minds.

When an independent study published in the prestigious journal Science confirmed the group’s success, Gardiner had been thrilled.

Then, last week, a report was issued raising significant doubts about the study’s validity.

“It felt like being cheated on in a relationship,” she said Thursday after the journal issued a formal retraction. “Breakup songs have been cathartic this week.”

The study had excited readers well beyond Gardiner’s circle for its surprising conclusion that a single doorstep chat could prompt a skeptic to embrace marriage equality. It even reported a “spillover” effect that extended to household members who didn’t talk to canvassers.

Although the findings contradicted a body of research that said firmly held opinions weren’t easily swayed by lobbying and political advertising, they seemed to confirm an idea people were happy to embrace — that honest conversation and open minds could bring people together.

The study made headlines across the country and was featured on the public radio program “This American Life.” Its primary author, University of California, Los Angeles graduate student Michael LaCour, scored a job offer from Princeton University.

As LaCour prepared to decamp for New Jersey, he handed off the study to a team at Stanford and UC Berkeley.
That’s how things began to unravel.

The new researchers were the first to suspect that something wasn’t quite right with LaCour’s data. They produced a report that persuaded LaCour’s co-author, Columbia University political scientist Donald Green, to request a retraction last week.

The editors of Science agreed, citing three reasons for retracting the study. They said LaCour lied about the way he recruited participants for his study and did not pay volunteers to complete online surveys, as he had claimed. They also said he lied about receiving research funding from the Williams Institute, the Ford Foundation and the Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Fund. LaCour’s attorney has acknowledged both of these deceptions.

Perhaps most significantly, the editors said, “LaCour has not produced the original survey data from which someone else could independently confirm the validity of the reported findings.”

LaCour still maintains that his study is sound. He said he has been preparing a “definitive response” to his critics, which he plans to provide Friday.

“I appreciate your patience, as I gather evidence and relevant information,” he said Thursday in an email to the Los Angeles Times.

The whole tale began at the LGBT Center, said Leadership Lab director David Fleischer. He came up with the idea of canvassing voters after voters approved Proposition 8, the 2008 ballot measure that repealed same-sex marriage in California.

“We wanted to understand the problems and what it would take to remedy them,” he said.

Canvassers started knocking on doors in the Los Angeles area in 2009, focusing on precincts that had voted in favor of the gay marriage ban by a margin of at least 2-to-1. By 2013, with more than 12,000 one-on-one conversations under their belts, group members were pretty sure they were changing voter minds.

Fleischer was eager to find out whether an independent analysis would prove they were right — and he knew just the person to call.

“I had admired Don’s work for years,” he said, praising Green’s careful studies that apply the rigorous methods used in medical research trials to the squishier realm of political science.

Green was intrigued, but he warned Fleischer that research would probably show the LGBT Center was having a smaller impact than it thought.

“I said OK — I just want to know,” Fleischer recalled.

Green made the introduction to LaCour. The men met in April 2013, Fleischer said, and soon started working together.

To assess whether the talks were changing minds, LaCour was charged with designing an online survey to gauge residents’ opinions on marriage equality. Then canvassers knocked on their doors. In 20-minute conversations, they discussed the benefits of marriage and explained that gays and lesbians wanted to experience them too.

The study also included a “placebo” group of residents who were lobbied about recycling and a control group that wasn’t lobbied about anything.

LaCour was supposed to administer follow-up surveys after the visits were complete.

The study results purported to show that after speaking with a canvasser, support for same-sex marriage rose from 39 percent to 47 percent. One year later, support for gay marriage was 14 percentage points higher among people who were lobbied by a gay person and 3 percentage points higher among those who were canvassed by a straight person, the study said.

With LaCour wrapping things up at UCLA, the LGBT Center brought on David Broockman, a professor of political economy at Stanford, and Joshua Kalla, a political science graduate student at UC Berkeley, to carry on the research.

But as they made plans to track a forthcoming canvassing project the Leadership Lab is undertaking in Miami, they started noticing problems with the work. For instance, as they began their own pilot survey, they noticed that their response rate was “notably lower” than LaCour’s.

When they sought additional advice from the survey firm that LaCour had reportedly employed, they quickly realized something was amiss.

“The survey firm claimed they had no familiarity with the project and that they had never had an employee with the name of the staffer we were asking for,” the researchers wrote. “The firm also denied having the capabilities to perform many aspects of the recruitment procedures described.”

Alarmed, Broockman, and Kalla turned a skeptical eye toward LaCour’s data and began investigating further with the help of Yale political scientist Peter Aronow. They soon realized that some of the paper’s key data were identical to that of a different national survey conducted in 2012: the Cooperative Campaign Analysis Project. That discovery raised “suspicions that the data might have been lifted from CCAP,” the researchers wrote.

The researchers compiled their findings in a 26-page report and sent it to Green. When confronted with the findings, Green immediately sent a letter to Science requesting that the paper be retracted.

“I am deeply embarrassed by this turn of events and apologize to the editors, reviewers and readers of Science,” Green wrote.

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Are Retirees Thinking Differently About Their Future?

Are Retirees Thinking Differently About Their Future?

By Tim Grant, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (TNS)

For the group of adults ages 35 to 48 known as Generation X, the golden years of retirement will look a lot different than it did for past generations of retirees who often worked one or two jobs their entire careers, left the workforce at age 65 with a pension and spent the rest of their lives pursuing passions and leisure activities.

Weighted down with student loans, credit card debt and measly saving accounts, the vast majority of people from Generation X have come to believe the traditional definition of retirement is a romantic fantasy of the past, with more than 8 in 10 who participated in an Allianz Life study saying that a retirement starting at age 65 spent doing what you want is unrealistic.

“We surmise they will either work during retirement because they don’t have enough money, or they want to work because it keeps them engaged,” said Katie Libbe, president of consumer insights at Allianz Life, based in Minneapolis.

Allianz Life studied 2,000 Americans — including 1,000 baby boomers ages 49 to 67; and 1,000 Gen Xers — to determine what differences may exist between them.

Both groups feel they will have a lower quality of retirement than previous generations, but Gen Xers were much more hopeless about their ability to achieve retirement goals and about their overall financial situation than were their boomer counterparts. More than two thirds (67 percent) of Gen Xers agreed with the idea that supposed targets for how much you need to retire are way out of reach versus less than half of boomers (49 percent).

“It is widely reported that baby boomers are worried about their retirement, but the financial planning and retirement concerns of Generation X have gotten less attention,” Libbe said. “While our study confirms that many boomers still lack confidence about their future, it reveals alarming realities about the significant angst and pessimism Gen X feels regarding the current and future state of their finances.”

“They’re the next generation that’s quickly approaching retirement and their hands-off approach to planning and preparation is alarming.”

Libbe said the Generation Xers who participated in the study were carrying an average $30,000 in credit card debt, and viewed their credit cards as a survival tool.

Each generation in the study believed they are burdened by more expenses, more uncertainty and more risk than their counterpart.

However, when it comes to jobs, money and retirement, even baby boomers agreed that Generation X has it much tougher planning for retirement, saving money, keeping a job, staying out of debt and getting a job.

“Gen X is very worried about retirement and it stems from what they have experienced in their working lives,” Libbe said. “They bought their houses during the housing bubble and they experienced two bubbles — the Tech Wreck and the Great Recession. And they also have more debt than other generations, either through student loans or their credit cards.”

“We look at this generation and see how rough it’s been for them to get or keep a job due to recessions. They’ve found it hard to get out of debt and due to these things they are not saving as they should.

“Yet, the really surprising thing is they still believe retirement will work out. They believe they will figure it out when they get there.”

(c)2015 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Photo: This jar of money isn’t going to cut it for retirement for Generation X. American Advisors Group via Flickr

New Autism Study

New Autism Study

Nobody knows the causes of Autism, that range of neurological development disorders that has stymied scientists since it was first identified in the 1940s. But now researchers may have some more concrete information on which to base new studies.

The New York Times reports the results of a study published in the journal Neuron that indicates the cause may be linked to an over abundance of brain synapses. In the normal course of development the brain discards some of these synapses in order to allow the areas of the brain to acquire specific functions. The new study, by neurobiologists at Columbia University Medical Center suggests that Autism causes this process to malfunction.

Scientists who study Autism have debated whether or not Autism results from too much, too little, or some combination of brain activity.  This study clearly indicates that it results from too much.

Photo: Wikimedia