kafkaland
Contributor
Academic honesty? Not what they taught me in grad school. Maybe the scientific method and intelectual honesty has been modified in the many years since. But I was taught that any hint paradox indicates your hypotheses (note - not theory) is incorrect and you are certainly missing something. There is far more than a hint of paradox here.
To flagrantly state that this may be a prolonged risk of diving when there is absolutely no evidence other than your own bias, no indication that number of dives or years diving have any effect is just bushwah. So definitely, yes - junk science. Or "alternate facts" as seems to be the current trend.
I don’t see the paradox here. This is an epidemiological study that tries to pick up a very small effect out of a big, noisy data set. Statistical analysis shows that there is a certain probability (not certainty!) that there is a correlation between diving and certain neurological impairments. When you now ask how the number of dives, or years diving, affect that correlation, you have to effectively break up your data set into, let’s say, people with few, or hundreds, or thousands of dives. Now you have even fewer data points and try to see an effect in them. And all that is stated in the article is that the data is then too noisy to see a correlation of neurological impairment with diving frequency. With a bigger data set, they might have been able to make more specific statements, but right now it’s just enough to suggest, with some certainly, an effect in the overall population. And that’s what they report. I don’t see any junk science here whatsoever. But what it really tells me is that the effect is very small to begin with, certainly nothing I have to worry about as an occasional diver.