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by verteu
625 days ago
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> [A]ccording Chris McManus, the researchers made a "very subtle error"... > Halpern and Coren took a list of the people who had recently died and contacted their families, asking whether or not their relative had been right- or left-handed. > Looking at 2,000 cases, they saw that the average age at death of the left-handers was about nine years younger than of the right-handers. > On that basis, they concluded that left-handers died earlier. > At first glance, that seems persuasive. What did the researchers do wrong? > "Their mistake was that they only looked at the dead," Chris McManus explains. > The point is that left-handers are more common now than they used to be, so - at least at the time the research was published - left-handers were on average younger than right-handers. https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-23988352 |
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