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spurious scholar

Because if p < 0.05, why not publish?

Step 1: Gather a bunch of data. There are 25,156 variables in my database. The data ranges from the mundane (air pollution in Chicago) to the weird (Hotdogs consumed by Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Competition Champion) to the super-niche (How clickbait-y Numberphile YouTube video titles are, as rated by an AI).
Step 2: Dredge that data to find random correlations between variables. "Dredging data" means taking one variable and correlating it against every other variable just to see what sticks. It's a dangerous way to go about analysis, because any sufficiently large dataset will yield strong correlations completely at random.

Fun fact: the chart used on the wikipedia page to demonstrate data dredging is also from me. I've been being naughty with data since 2014.

Step 3: Calculate the correlation coefficient, confidence interval, and p-value to see if the connection is statistically significant. "Statistically significant" is a misleading term. It sounds like it means "statistically significant" because, you know, those are the same two words. Unfortunately statistical significance is a technical term that means mumble mumble at least as extreme mumble mumble null hypothesis mumble mumble probability mumble mumble p-values.

You know what? Forget the technical definition. "Statistically significant" just means "someone did some fancy math."

I really did the fancy math below and you can check it by clicking on the "view detailed data" link under each paper. And these really do qualify as "statistically significant" in the technical sense. It's just that "statistically significant" does not mean the results are "significant."

Step 4: If it is, have a large language model draft a research paper.
Step 5: Remind everyone that these papers are AI-generated and are not real. Seriously, just pick one and read the lit review section. The silliness of the papers is an artifact of me (1) having fun and (2) acknowledging that realistic-looking AI-generated noise is a real concern for academic research (peer reviews in particular).

The papers could sound more realistic than they do, but I intentionally prompted the model to write papers that look real but sound silly.

Also: every page says "This paper is AI-generated" at the bottom and the first letters of the names of the authors always spell out C-H-A-T-G-P-T.

Step 6: ...publish:

Pawsitively Trending: The Howl Relationship between 'Doge' Meme Popularity and 'Numberphile' Google Searches
The Journal of Memetics and Internet Culture
r=0.867 · 95% conf. int. [0.662,0.951] · r2=0.752 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Counting Carpenters: The Correlation between Computerphile's Catchy YouTube Titles and the Carpenter Count in the Virgin Islands
The Journal of Quirky Quantitative Research
r=0.880 · 95% conf. int. [0.562,0.971] · r2=0.775 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Libertarian Visions and Conveyor Operator Positions: A Coordinated Condition in Missouri's Political-Economic Tradition
Journal of Libertarian Economics and Policy
r=0.970 · 95% conf. int. [0.747,0.997] · r2=0.942 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Republican Representation in Nevada and the Relationship to Rocketing Gasoline in Saint Helena
The Journal of Political Quirkiness
r=0.802 · 95% conf. int. [0.123,0.969] · r2=0.643 · p < 0.05
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

The Dewey Decibels: Exploring the Shelving-arious Relationship Between Library Science Master's Degrees and Air Pollution in Sierra Vista, Arizona
The Journal of Eclectic Environmental Studies
r=0.887 · 95% conf. int. [0.583,0.973] · r2=0.787 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Clearing the Air: Investigating the High-Note Relationship Between Air Pollution in Augusta, Georgia, and Google Searches for 'Snoop Dogg'
Journal of Environmental Entertainment Studies
r=0.905 · 95% conf. int. [0.760,0.965] · r2=0.820 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Smog and Astronaut Swag: The Link Between Air Pollution in Kingston, New York and NASA's Budgetary High
The Journal of Ecological Economics and Space Exploration
r=0.836 · 95% conf. int. [0.641,0.930] · r2=0.700 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Snow Much Clicking: The Provocative Power of Tom Scott's YouTube Titles on Winter Weather in Dallas
The Journal of Clickbait Studies
r=0.859 · 95% conf. int. [0.604,0.955] · r2=0.738 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Kacey and Effect: Exploring the Correlation Between Name Popularity and Stand-up Maths Video Likes
The Journal of Nameology
r=0.926 · 95% conf. int. [0.751,0.979] · r2=0.857 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Laughing at Math While Eating Veggies: A Statistical Analysis of US Household Spending on Processed Vegetables and Stand-up Maths YouTube Video Comments
Journal of Mathematical Munchies
r=0.879 · 95% conf. int. [0.616,0.966] · r2=0.773 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Colette in the Ballot Box: An Examination of the Relationship between the Name Popularity and Libertarian Votes in Louisiana
The Journal of Quirky Political Analysis
r=0.942 · 95% conf. int. [0.787,0.985] · r2=0.887 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Air Bags and Ballots: Exploring the Political Influence on Automotive Recalls in North Dakota
Journal of Automotive Risk and Policy Analysis
r=0.986 · 95% conf. int. [0.871,0.999] · r2=0.972 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Libertarian Lift: The Link Between Killian and D.C. Ballot Filling
Journal of Political Satire and Analysis
r=0.909 · 95% conf. int. [0.617,0.981] · r2=0.826 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Gasoline and Chagrin: The LPG Connection to the Loss Meme's Ascension
The Journal of Anomalous Energy Phenomena
r=0.891 · 95% conf. int. [0.697,0.964] · r2=0.794 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Ain't Nobody Got Time for That: The Correlation Between the Popularity of a Meme and the Number of Physics Teachers in West Virginia Universities
The Journal of Internet Memetics and Unconventional Research
r=0.835 · 95% conf. int. [0.593,0.939] · r2=0.698 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Meme Mania: Exploring the LPG-Popularity Paranoia Paradigm
The Journal of Internet Culture and Communication
r=0.926 · 95% conf. int. [0.796,0.974] · r2=0.858 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Bowling Green's Air Pollution Scene: The Green of Smog, The Nag of Splits
The Journal of Environmental Humor and Science
r=0.818 · 95% conf. int. [0.612,0.920] · r2=0.669 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Air-frying Fast Food: Exploring the Link between Air Pollution and Fast Food Cooks in Wausau, Wisconsin
Journal of Culinary Pollution Studies
r=0.801 · 95% conf. int. [0.555,0.918] · r2=0.642 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Solar Power and GOP Votes Roll: A Statistical Corollary
The Journal of Eco-Political Dynamics
r=0.988 · 95% conf. int. [0.537,1.000] · r2=0.976 · p < 0.05
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Chilling Connections: The Surprising Correlation Between Democratic Votes for Senators in Virginia and Google Searches for How to Get to Antarctica
Journal of Political Paradoxes
r=0.982 · 95% conf. int. [0.837,0.998] · r2=0.964 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Spinning into Action: Exploring the Furry Link between Fidget Spinner Frenzy and Animal Control Workforce in New Mexico
Journal of Playful Behavior
r=1.000 · 95% conf. int. [1.000,1.000] · r2=1.000 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

The Trendy Tie: Exploring the Link between the 'we live in a society' Meme and 'Yeet' Searches
Journal of Internet Linguistics
r=0.865 · 95% conf. int. [0.669,0.949] · r2=0.749 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Seeking Senators: The Surprising Saga of Montana's Democrats and Daring Antarctic Destinations
The Journal of Polar Politics and Pioneering Politicians
r=0.964 · 95% conf. int. [0.698,0.996] · r2=0.929 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

Cracking the Earthly Code: Unearthing the Republican Vote-Geothermal Power Nexus
The Journal of Political Geoscience
r=0.846 · 95% conf. int. [0.350,0.971] · r2=0.716 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details

The Tale of Yale: The Link Between Book Sale and Air Pollution Prevail
The Journal of Ecological Economics and Epidemiology
r=0.902 · 95% conf. int. [0.781,0.958] · r2=0.814 · p < 0.01
Generated Jan 2024 · View data details


Currently viewing 25 of 4,731 spurious research papers

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Why this works

  1. Data dredging: I have 25,156 variables in my database. I compare all these variables against each other to find ones that randomly match up. That's 632,824,336 correlation calculations! This is called “data dredging.” Fun fact: the chart used on the wikipedia page to demonstrate data dredging is also from me. I've been being naughty with data since 2014.
    Instead of starting with a hypothesis and testing it, I isntead tossed a bunch of data in a blender to see what correlations would shake out. It’s a dangerous way to go about analysis, because any sufficiently large dataset will yield strong correlations completely at random.
  2. Lack of causal connection: There is probably no direct connection between these variables, despite what the AI says above. Because these pages are automatically generated, it's possible that the two variables you are viewing are in fact causually related. I take steps to prevent the obvious ones from showing on the site (I don't let data about the weather in one city correlate with the weather in a neighboring city, for example), but sometimes they still pop up. If they are related, cool! You found a loophole.
    This is exacerbated by the fact that I used "Years" as the base variable. Lots of things happen in a year that are not related to each other! Most studies would use something like "one person" in stead of "one year" to be the "thing" studied.
  3. Observations not independent: For many variables, sequential years are not independent of each other. You will often see trend-lines form. If a population of people is continuously doing something every day, there is no reason to think they would suddenly change how they are doing that thing on January 1. A naive p-value calculation does not take this into account. You will calculate a lower chance of "randomly" achieving the result than represents reality.

    To be more specific: p-value tests are probability values, where you are calculating the probability of achieving a result at least as extreme as you found completely by chance. When calculating a p-value, you need to assert how many "degrees of freedom" your variable has. I count each year (minus one) as a "degree of freedom," but this is misleading for continuous variables.

    This kind of thing can creep up on you pretty easily when using p-values, which is why it's best to take it as "one of many" inputs that help you assess the results of your analysis.
  4. Outliers: Some datasets here have outliers which drag up the correlation. In concept, "outlier" just means "way different than the rest of your dataset." When calculating a correlation like this, they are particularly impactful because a single outlier can substantially increase your correlation.

    Because this page is automatically generated, I don't know whether any of the charts displayed on it have outliers. I'm just a footnote. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    I intentionally mishandeled outliers, which makes the correlation look extra strong.



Spurious Scholar was launched January 27, 2024. If you have feedback on it, I'd love to hear from you! Shoot me a note: feedback@tylervigen.com.


Project by Tyler Vigen
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