It’s a popular article, not a study. It references several scientists; Jonathan Schooler on the “decline” of his results on verbal overshadowing, Michael Jennions, and so on. (I was able to find the full text by combining the article title and the term “PDF” in one Google query.)
I was under the impression that Lehrer was referencing some journal article specifically. I took away that a combination of bad science(unrepeatable experimental set up because all of the variables were not pinned down by the experimental scientist), publication bais, and randomness some times lead to an over reporting of positive results. It really does seem like Lehrer over stated his argument to make the topic seem more important then it is.
Is there a point that the article is trying to make that you are interested in that I am missing?
It’s a popular article, not a study. It references several scientists; Jonathan Schooler on the “decline” of his results on verbal overshadowing, Michael Jennions, and so on. (I was able to find the full text by combining the article title and the term “PDF” in one Google query.)
Seth Roberts has some comments.
This blog which I’ve just stumbled across and haven’t read yet has more commentary.
I was under the impression that Lehrer was referencing some journal article specifically. I took away that a combination of bad science(unrepeatable experimental set up because all of the variables were not pinned down by the experimental scientist), publication bais, and randomness some times lead to an over reporting of positive results. It really does seem like Lehrer over stated his argument to make the topic seem more important then it is.
Is there a point that the article is trying to make that you are interested in that I am missing?
edited for spelling + clarity