AD-HOC, POST-HOC HYPOTHESES

Formulate and write down your hypotheses before you examine the data.

Patterns in data can suggest, but cannot confirm, hypotheses unless these hypotheses were formulated before the data were collected.

Everywhere we look, there are patterns. In fact, the harder we look the more patterns we see. Three rock stars die in a given year. Fold the United States twenty-dollar bill in just the right way and not only the Pentagon but the Twin Towers in flames are revealed.3 It is natural for us to want to attribute some underlying cause to these patterns, but those who have studied the laws of probability tell us that more often than not patterns are simply the result of random events.

Put another way, finding at least one cluster of events in time or in space has a greater probability than finding no clusters at all (equally spaced events).

How can we determine whether an observed association represents an underlying cause-and-effect relationship or is merely the result of chance? The answer lies in our research protocol. When we set out to test a specific hypothesis, the probability of a specific event is predetermined. But when we uncover an apparent association, one that may well have arisen purely by chance, we cannot be sure of the association’s validity until we conduct a second set of controlled trials.

In the International Study of Infarct Survival [1988], patients born under the Gemini or Libra astrological birth signs did not survive as long when their ...

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