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by MauranKilom
1336 days ago
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I don't understand what exactly you are complaining about. Can you elaborate on which specific statistical claim you think they should not make? This is not an analysis of "what fraction of people are attractive to mosquitoes", it is about how mosquito attraction differs between people. You can make meaningful statistical claims about this with just two subjects (and lots of measurements, which they did - see e.g. Fig 1G). I also don't understand how you complain about the insufficient sample size and then go on to claim the difference between two cohorts is "extremely inconsistent". |
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With just two subjects, there is a very high chance that the results of your testing are overly specific to those two subjects, and do not hold for most of the population.
With only 8 subjects, as in this study, that is still very true.
For example, people like the one person the mosquitos were extremely attracted to could be one in 10, one in 100 or one in a million. In the latter case, the findings are much, much less meaningful.
That's true even for the findings about specific genes affecting attraction. What if that one person is an extreme outlier and the mechanism causing the results isn't relevant for 99.9999% of the human population?
> Can you elaborate on which specific statistical claim you think they should not make?
For example, the claim that "Highly attractive people have higher levels of carboxylic acids on their skin" does not seem to be well enough backed by evidence in this case. If they wrote, "the one/three attractive people we tested had higher levels of carboxylic acids on their skin", I'd have no complaints.