Making a Living in China

Several buildings are being built on the Tsinghua campus. At least one woman makes a living as a prostitute among the construction workers. She is known as Qikuaiban, which means seven and half yuan (about $1). The name came about when she offered her services to a worker, he said, “All I have is seven and a half yuan,” and she accepted that payment.

Happiness in China: Who wants to be a construction worker?

Unfortunate Obituaries: The Case of David Freedman

One of my colleagues at Berkeley didn’t return library books. He kept them in his office, as if he owned them. He didn’t pay bills, either: He stuck them in his desk drawer. He was smart and interesting but after he failed to show up at a lunch date — no explanation, no apology — I stopped having lunch with him. He died several years ago. At his memorial service, at the Berkeley Faculty Club, one of the speakers mentioned his non-return of library books and non-payment of bills as if they were amusing eccentricities! I’m sure they were signs of a bigger problem. He did no research, no scholarly work of any sort. When talking about science with him — a Berkeley professor in a science department — it was like talking to a non-scientist.

David Freedman, a Berkeley statistics professor who died recently, was more influential. He is best known for a popular introductory textbook. The work of his I found most interesting was his comments on census adjustment: He was against adjusting the census to remove bias caused by undercount. This was only slightly less ridiculous than not returning library books — and far more harmful, because his arguments were used by Republicans to block census adjustment. TheƂ undercounted tended to vote Democrat. The similarity with my delinquent colleague is the very first line in Freedman’s obituary: He “fought for three decades to keep the United States census on a firm statistical foundation.” Please. A Berkeley statistics professor, I have no idea who, must have written or approved that statement!

The obituary elaborates on this supposed contribution:

“The census turns out to be remarkably good, despite the generally bad press reviews,” Freedman and Wachter wrote in a 2001 paper published in the journal Society. “Statistical adjustment is unlikely to improve the accuracy, because adjustment can easily put in more error than it takes out.”

There are two kinds of error: variance and bias. The adjustment would surely increase variance and almost surely decrease bias. The quoted comments ignore this. They are a modern Let Them Eat Cake.

Few people hoard library books, but Freedman’s misbehavior is common. I blogged earlier about a blue-ribbon nutrition committee that ignored evidence that didn’t come from a double-blind trial. Late in his career, Freedman spent a great deal of time criticizing other people’s work. Maybe his critiques did some good but I thought they were obvious (the assumptions of the statistical method weren’t clearly satisfied — who knew?) and that it was lazy the way he would merely show that the criticized work (e.g., earthquake prediction) fell short of perfection and fail to show how it related to other work in its field — whether it was an improvement or not. As they say, he could see the cost of everything and the value of nothing. That he felt comfortable spending most of his time doing this, and his obituary would praise it (“the skeptical conscience of statistics”), says something highly unflattering about modern scientific culture.

For reasonable comments about census adjustment, see Eriksen, Eugene P., Kadane, Joseph B., and Tukey, John W. (1989). Adjusting the 1980 census of population and housing. JASA, 84, 927-943.

How Safe is Melamine? Is This Funny or Horrifying?

From Natural News:

Up to 90 percent of the infant formula sold in the United States may be contaminated with trace amounts of melamine, the toxic chemical linked to kidney damage, according to recent tests. The FDA’s test results, which the agency hid from the public and only released after the Associated Press filed a Freedom of Information Act request, showed that Nestle, Mead Johnson and Enfamil infant formula products were all contaminated with melamine. . . .

Prior to these test results being made public, the FDA had published a document on its website that explained there was no safe level of melamine contamination in infant formula. Specifically, the FDA stated, “FDA is currently unable to establish any level of melamine and melamine-related compounds in infant formula that does not raise public health concerns.”

Once tests found melamine in U.S.-made formula products, however, the FDA changed its story. As of today, the FDA has now officially declared melamine to be safe in infant formula as long as the contamination level is less than one part per million (1 ppm).

Astonishingly: The FDA has no new science to justify its abrupt decision declaring melamine to be safe!

I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall when that decision was made.

Self-Experimentation on Someone Else: Alzheimer’s Disease

From the St. Petersburg Times:

After two weeks of taking coconut oil, Steve Newport’s results in an early onset Alzheimer’s test gradually improved says his wife, Dr. Mary Newport. Before treatment, Steve could barely remember how to draw a clock. Two weeks after adding coconut oil to his diet, his drawing improved. After 37 days, Steve’s drawing gained even more clarity. [The three drawings are shown in a photo.] The oil seemed to “lift the fog,” his wife says.

. . .

He began taking coconut oil every day, and by the fifth day, there was a tremendous improvement.

The wife took her husband’s treatment into her own hands, just as I tried to improve my sleep myself — it was self-experimentation in that sense.

This is related to my omega-3 research in that it is another example of a fat having highly beneficial brain effects.