Unscientific Beliefs about Scientific Topics in Nutrition
Author(s) -
Andrew W. Brown,
John P. A. Ioannidis,
Mark B. Cope,
Dennis M. Bier,
David B. Allison
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advances in nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.362
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 2161-8313
pISSN - 2156-5376
DOI - 10.3945/an.114.006577
Subject(s) - scientific evidence , psychology , session (web analytics) , association (psychology) , social psychology , medicine , epistemology , psychotherapist , philosophy , world wide web , computer science
Humans interact with food daily. Such repeated exposure creates a widespread, superficial familiarity with nutrition. Personal familiarity with nutrition from individual and cultural perspectives may give rise to beliefs about food not grounded in scientific evidence. In this summary of the session entitled “Unscientific Beliefs about Scientific Topics in Nutrition,” we discuss accumulated work illustrating and quantifying potentially misleading practices in the conduct and, more so, reporting of nutrition science along with proposed approaches to amelioration. We begin by defining “unscientific beliefs” and from where such beliefs may come, followed by discussing how large bodies of nutritional epidemiologic observations not only create highly improbable patterns of association but implausible magnitudes of implied effect. Poor reporting practices, biases, and methodologic issues that have distorted scientific understandings of nutrition are presented, followed by potential influences of conflicts of interest that extend beyond financial considerations. We conclude with recommendations for improving the conduct, reporting, and communication of nutrition-related research to ground discussions in evidence rather than solely on beliefs.
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