Goodbye, cold rain and snow; hello, warm weather! With spring approaching, people will slowly emerge from their winter domiciles, and mosey into the great outdoors. The season gives us new opportunities to walk, hike, bike, picnic, fish, and play golf. But for most, one unpleasant inevitability accompanies these active pleasures: itchy mosquito bites.
Walmart offers salvation in a product you can buy online, the Viatek Mosquito Shield Band. A box of ten will set you back 20 bucks, less one copper penny. And here's the pitch:
"Enjoy your time outdoors more this summer with the Viatek BUGBANDS10 Bug Repellant Band. It has been scientifically proven to keep annoying bugs, such as mosquitoes, ticks, flies and gnats, away. The Viatek mosquito shield band is ideal for use when you want to entertain guests in your back yard. The item is 100 percent natural and lasts up to 120 hours. All you have to do is put it on your wrist, ankle, bag or stroller to keep the bugs away. The band continues to work for up to five days even when it gets wet. It can also help protect your family from lime disease and other health concerns that result from getting bit by insects."
Impressed?
Before you shell out for your supply, you should know something about the scientifically-proven part: it's pure hokum. Never mind that Walmart misspelled Lyme. The manufacturer, Viatek, "said that their wristbands would protect you from mosquito bites, but their claims weren't backed up by scientific evidence," said Jessica Rich, Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "Those claims violate the law and a 2003 FTC order against the defendants."
In the suit that the FTC brought against Viatek, the agency alleged that the "defendants do not possess, and did not possess at the time they made the representations, competent and reliable scientific evidence to substantiate the claims they made in advertisements." The case is pending a court ruling. No scientific evidence? But Viatek said scientifically proven! So did Walmart! And 75% percent of the people who spoke up online at Walmart said they would recommend this product to a friend. Maybe all of this is getting too . . . unscientific. Hmmmm. I'm glad the nannies at the FTC have my back.
"Brain training" services have also raised hackles for gratuitously invoking science for their product promotions and advertising. Lumosity, a service that has over 50 million subscribers - about the same number as Netflix - uses the tagline, "Challenge memory and attention with scientific brain games." The company's 46-second promotional video, accessible on its homepage, mentions science three times. Competitors such as Cogmed, and BrainHQ have taken similar approaches, mixing shovelfuls of science gravitas into their online content.
But it seems that not everyone cozies to the industry's marketing schtick. An article in Scientific American (Brain Training Doesn't Make You Smarter, December 2, 2014) gave a scathing rebuke to their methods. "Cogmed claims to be 'a computer-based solution for attention problems caused by poor working memory,' and BrainHQ will help you 'make the most of your unique brain.' The promise of all of these products, implied or explicit, is that brain training can make you smarter-and make your life better."
The article referenced a press release from The Stanford University Center on Longevity and the Berlin Max Planck Institute for Human Development:
"It is customary for advertising to highlight the benefits and overstate potential advantages of their products. In the brain-game market, however, advertisements also assure consumers that claims and promises are based on solid scientific evidence, as the games are 'designed by neuroscientists' at top universities and research centers. These claims are reinforced through paid advertising and distributed by trusted news sources."
The formal statement from these two organizations was signed by seventy of the world's leading cognitive psychologists and neuroscientists, and included this paragraph:
"We object to the claim that brain games offer consumers a scientifically grounded avenue to reduce or reverse cognitive decline when there is no compelling scientific evidence to date that they do . . . The strong consensus of this group is that the scientific literature does not support claims that the use of software-based 'brain games' alters neural functioning in ways that improve general cognitive performance in everyday life, or prevent cognitive slowing and brain disease."
The statement further explains that although some brain training companies "present lists of credentialed scientific consultants and keep registries of scientific studies pertinent to cognitive training . . . the cited research is [often] only tangentially related to the scientific claims of the company, and to the games they sell."
Society needs more highly-principled scientists ratting out other cases of similarly misleading product marketing hype. Beyond bug bands and brain games, many industries misuse science as a selling tool, exploiting its persuasive power, and capitalizing on its insidious ability to help marketers shortcut any obligation to offer deeper explanations.
"Backed by science," "based on science," "supported by scientific evidence," and "scientifically proven." It's embedded in much of the media that comes our way. Science this and science that, breathlessly delivered to inboxes through email marketing blasts, RSS, and Tweeted from Twitter. Hard-hitting hype from the social media content team! We can't get enough science. Just added to the mix: data science, and data scientists. We've become jaded. Little wonder that people regularly punt their rights to being skeptical. "Why bother? Everybody shouts this stuff."
For me, all of this science lingo once conjured benign and reassuring images. Smart, slightly geeky-looking people wearing glasses, dressed in pristine starched white lab coats, holding clipboards or tablet computers. Brows furrowed in deep thought, they tirelessly ponder mind-numbing tables of numbers, while asking penetrating questions, and extracting clarity from the inscrutable. All for the purpose of bringing us a step closer to the truth.
But today, when I hear science juxtaposed to a product category, name or brand, I'm just as likely to envision a slickly-dressed huckster with a bank account, wearing an expensive watch and Gucci shoes. A modern-day "Doctor" John R. Brinkley, whose self-promoted quack science in the early 1900's for restoring male virility was eventually exposed by the dogged Morris Fishbein of the American Medical Association. But not before Brinkley became very, very wealthy through his cleverly-marketed services. "Sales is all about giving customers what they want!" Yes...but...well, gosh. It's easy to stray off the ethical road when you're making a beeline toward Positive Cash Flow City.
"Well, I'm not a scientist." - Florida governor Rick Scott
What makes the widespread use of science messages in advertising and promotion perplexing is that in America, views on science are decidedly mixed. Governor Scott just banned using the words global warming and climate change in any official state communication. Hard to imagine anything more anti-science, except banning science textbooks from Florida's classrooms. "Maybe that's coming! . . ." Worried sarcasm, coming from the office right next door.
Elsewhere, in 2013, residents of the City of Portland, Oregon, nixed adding fluoride to the local drinking water. And a 2014 Pew Research Survey showed a sizable gap between the views held by scientists and those held by US adults on several key issues. For example, 88% of scientists believe that genetically modified foods are safe to eat, compared to 37% of US adults. And 98% of scientists believe that humans and other living things have evolved over time, compared to 65% of US adults. (Yes, I typed the latter percentage correctly.) Clearly, not everyone trusts scientists, or what they say.
On the other hand, many people, including me, hold an abiding appreciation for science. "Science appeals to our rational brain," wrote Joel Achenbach in The Washington Post (Why Americans are So Dubious about Science, February 15, 2015). This should give marketers pause. Science messaging might turn a prospective customer on, or send him or her running hysterically in the opposite direction.
Either way, we're plagued with enough science naiveté to fill a room, which makes conditions ripe for fakery and truth-stretching. In a book review of Vitamania (The Wall Street Journal, March 19, 2015), Trevor Butterworth wrote, "They are avatars of vitality, better taken than understood." He was referring to vitamins, herbal remedies, and other dietary supplements, but his comment speaks to the problems that emanate from science hype. Fortunately, organizations have been established in response to the profound need for better public education. Sense about Science was among the best I found. "We are a charitable trust that equips people to make sense of scientific and medical claims in public discussion." A great resource - if you have a computer and a web connection. (The last I checked, 60% of the world's population do not.)
Science is a social construct, and we entrust it to reveal the truth. According to Marcia McNutt, former head of the US Geological Survey, and now editor of the magazine, Science, "science is a method for deciding whether what we choose to believe has a basis on the laws of nature, or not." Which is why it's destructive when people misuse the term in a marketing or sales context. Often, their authoritative assertions come from far less rigorous investigation. Or worse, simply from what they think. Or even worse, from what they want us to think.
Where should the line be drawn, then? Fair question. In their case against Viatek, the regulators at the FTC placed it right about here:
"For purposes of this order, the following definitions shall apply: 'Competent and reliable scientific evidence' shall mean tests, analyses, research, studies, or other evidence based on the expertise of professionals in the relevant area, that have been conducted and evaluated in an objective manner by persons qualified to do so, using procedures generally accepted in the profession to yield accurate and reliable results."
The definition still allows considerable legal wiggle room. To borrow from the familiar proverb, Science is in the eye of the beholder. Which is why it's important to differentiate good science from bad science / pseudo-science.
Good science
Good science begins with using the modern scientific method:
• Ask a Question
• Do Background Research
• Construct a Hypothesis
• Test Your Hypothesis by Doing an Experiment
• Analyze Your Data and Draw a Conclusion
• Communicate Your Results
The scientific method has democratized science in our time, and makes scientific discovery accessible to anyone - from kindergarteners to great-grandparents. You don't need an advanced degree to engage in scientific research, just a commitment to approach the experiment through the scientific method. This method galvanizes communities of knowledge, and helps people cohere the experimental conclusions of others, expanding our learning opportunities. In our society, what matters most in vetting the believability of science is the basis for the experiment, and the integrity of the methods used.
Good science uses experimental methods that are clearly documented and open to a peer community. Good science develops experiments that can be replicated by others, enabling the results to be independently verified. Good science has explanatory and predictive power. But this does not mean that good science cannot be disproven. Good science accepts reasonable challenges to its findings, and encourages peer review.
Bad science and pseudo-science
According to Wikipedia, "Pseudoscience is often characterized by the use of vague, contradictory, exaggerated or unprovable claims, an over-reliance on confirmation rather than rigorous attempts at refutation, a lack of openness to evaluation by other experts, and a general absence of systematic processes to rationally develop theories." Often, the experimenter has an ulterior motive for conducting the experiment, such as personal financial gain, or power and influence. The experimental method does not conform to the modern scientific method, and there's often pressure to confirm what the researchers (or the study's sponsors) already believe. The variables are often not controlled. Most notably, bad science lacks community. The results cannot be reliably tested by others, and are rarely, if ever, embedded in other research, cited in academic journals, or re-used in any way. The results are often self-proclaimed as "inerrant," or "beyond debate."
What's the best antidote to being suckered by scientific hokum? Constant skepticism. Something to keep in mind the next time you read or hear anything claiming scientific proof, or "having science behind it." "Scientific results are always provisional, susceptible to being overturned by some future experiment or observation." Joel Achenbach wrote. "Scientists rarely proclaim an absolute truth or an absolute certainty. Uncertainty is inevitable at the frontiers of knowledge."
Further reading: Guidelines for Evaluating Scientific Studies
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