Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine Science

Fake Mouse On Twitter Mocks Overgeneralized Scientific Research (twitter.com) 91

DevNull127 writes: Research scientist James Heathers is a postdoctoral research associate working on bio-signals and meta-science research at Northeastern University, with a PhD from the University of Sydney. He's also pretending to be a mouse on Twitter. And every tweet consists of the exact same two words...

Heathers retweets articles about scientific studies — usually articles with glossy photos and enticing headlines like "Exercise during pregnancy protects children from obesity, study finds." His tweets add the two crucial missing words. "In mice."

In this case a doctoral student at Washington State University measured a specific protein's level in the offspring of mice that performed 60 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise every morning during pregnancy — and in regular mice. On the basis of that he recommended "that women — whether or not they are obese or have diabetes — exercise regularly during pregnancy because it benefits their children's metabolic health."

The name of the Twitter feed: JustSaysInMice.

Other mouse-based studies turning up on the Twitter feed:
  • How Fatty Diets Stop the Brain From Saying 'No' To Food
  • Reused Cooking Oil Ups Risk of Metastases In Breast Cancer Patients
  • Keto Diet Not Effective, Causes Blood Sugar Problems In Women
  • Growth Hormone Acts To Foil Weight Loss: Study

When you read those headlines, just remember to add those two words...

"In mice."


This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Fake Mouse On Twitter Mocks Overgeneralized Scientific Research

Comments Filter:
  • Clearly it's AstroTurfing, but wow they paid too much to the wrong people.

  • by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Sunday April 14, 2019 @03:53PM (#58436976) Journal

    Reminds me of the fortune cookie game where you say "in bed" at the end.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday April 14, 2019 @04:00PM (#58437006)

    Everything has to be spectacular and groundbreaking and changing everything. Here is news: Most research is incremental or not directly applicable and the rest is almost never groundbreaking. Deal with it. This is a slow process and over-hyping results is a huge disservice to all of humanity.

    • by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Sunday April 14, 2019 @05:20PM (#58437276)

      It also desensitizes people to truly important things. I feel that there would be a lot less backlash to things like climate change if they weren't force fed bullshit nonstop. Thanks in large part to useless science reporting, people believe that science is indecisive and incompetent. I still remembering wtf'ing about the back and forth "eggs are good" "eggs are bad" a couple decades ago.

      IMO a reporter needs to have taken courses in stats and spend time doing actual research before being allowed to report it.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Indeed. When everything is hyped, even scientists have a hard time separating hype from fact. It becomes excessively tiresome.

        • When everything is hyped, even scientists have a hard time separating hype from fact. It becomes excessively tiresome, in mice

          FTFY

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 14, 2019 @04:26PM (#58437108)

    When I was in university decades ago, the headline then was, "study concludes laboratory research causes cancer in mice".

    The root of the strory coming from paper after paper purporting consuming one thingbor anotber caused cancer. No, silly! It's the research, the lab lighting, the little cages and poking and proding that is giving mice cancer, not what they are consuming.

    Nice to see the internet finally caught up and updated the joke for a new generation!

  • by PPH ( 736903 )

    ... it has come to this.

  • by jabberw0k ( 62554 ) on Sunday April 14, 2019 @09:46PM (#58438046) Homepage Journal
    Silicon Valley Is Replacing Libertarianism With Socialism, In Mice.
  • by religionofpeas ( 4511805 ) on Sunday April 14, 2019 @11:50PM (#58438324)

    The last common ancestor between humans and mice lived 75 million years ago. As a comparison, the last common ancestor between cows and orcas lived 50 million years ago, but nobody would think it would be a good idea to use cow studies to determine what's best for an orca.

    • Do you have a better idea?
      • The main point is that overly strong conclusions are drawn from bad mouse studies. Mouse studies are cheap, and combined with the need for publish or perish, we get daily exposure to crappy mouse studies.

        This is like a drunk man who's lost his keys in the dark, and then goes to look for them under a street lamp down the road, just because there's more light there.

    • The last common ancestor between humans and mice lived 75 million years ago. As a comparison, the last common ancestor between cows and orcas lived 50 million years ago, but nobody would think it would be a good idea to use cow studies to determine what's best for an orca.

      There would certainly be stronger ethical concerns studying with many organisms more closely related; and mice share our omnivorous diet. (amongst other things). It's not perfect, but it's a good start.

      Mice can cheaply be bred and kept in large numbers- and are a lot closer to us genetically than a fruit fly.

  • When you read those headlines, just remember to add those two words...

    "In mice."

    So, is this like the new fortune cookie rule? If anyone is still unfamiliar with the fortune cookie rule, you're supposed to add ", in bed" to the end of your fortune.

    Now for any research article we're supposed to add ", in Mice" to the end.

  • Reused Cooking Oil Ups Risk of Metastases In Breast Cancer Patients In Mice

    Keto Diet Not Effective, Causes Blood Sugar Problems In Women In Mice

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

Working...