Editor’s Note: This is a repost of a previous post on our blog from 2012. The repost is inspired by similar issues with statistical illiteracy that are coming up in allergy screening and pregnancy screening.
I just was doing my morning reading of a few news sources and stumbled across this Huffington Post article talking about research correlating babies cries to autism. It suggests that the sound of a babies cries may predict their future risk for autism. As the parent of a young son, this obviously caught my attention in a very lizard-brain, caveman sort of way. I couldn’t find a link to the research paper in the article so I did some searching and found out this result is also being covered by Time, Science Daily, Medical Daily, and a bunch of other news outlets.
Now thoroughly freaked, I looked online and found the pdf of the original research article. I started looking at the statistics and took a deep breath. Based on the analysis they present in the article there is absolutely no statistical evidence that a babies’ cries can predict autism. Here are the flaws with the study:
Taken together, these problems mean that the statistical analysis of these data do not show any connection between crying and autism.
The problem here exists on two levels. First, there was a failing in the statistical evaluation of this manuscript at the peer review level. Most statistical referees would have spotted these flaws and pointed them out for such a highly controversial paper. A second problem is that news agencies report on this result and despite paying lip-service to potential limitations, are not statistically literate enough to point out the major flaws in the analysis that reduce the probability of a true positive. Should journalists have some minimal in statistics that allows them to determine whether a result is likely to be a false positive to save us parents a lot of panic?