Oh my God, Eggo was banned permanently? This just doesn't seem real, usually he just bounces back again after a week or so...
As for the topic, weren't most of the "studies" posted today all posted by one person, who seemed to think his PS3 shouldn't be used for games because they corrupt the mind?
Studies on the whole can be quite interesting, and when done in a worthwhile toic and proper statistical analysis is used I agree that studies are good. However, what a lot of people fail to realise is that studies into things are often biased. Plus, they are sometimes used to make false claims. For example, evidence could be found that shows that people eat more chocolate during winter. Someone could then use that evidence to say that winter makes people eat more chocolate, and claim winter as the actual reason. However, there may be no evidence linking the two. A claim is simply made as an assumption based on limited evidence. This is seen a lot in statistics, hence the quote about "three types of lies: Lies, Damned lies and Statistics". We just need to look at studies of this kind with an open mind and decide for ourselves whether there is bias, whether there is enough evidence for claims, and then decide what we should think ourselves.
As for the topic, weren't most of the "studies" posted today all posted by one person, who seemed to think his PS3 shouldn't be used for games because they corrupt the mind?
Studies on the whole can be quite interesting, and when done in a worthwhile toic and proper statistical analysis is used I agree that studies are good. However, what a lot of people fail to realise is that studies into things are often biased. Plus, they are sometimes used to make false claims. For example, evidence could be found that shows that people eat more chocolate during winter. Someone could then use that evidence to say that winter makes people eat more chocolate, and claim winter as the actual reason. However, there may be no evidence linking the two. A claim is simply made as an assumption based on limited evidence. This is seen a lot in statistics, hence the quote about "three types of lies: Lies, Damned lies and Statistics". We just need to look at studies of this kind with an open mind and decide for ourselves whether there is bias, whether there is enough evidence for claims, and then decide what we should think ourselves.