Why Aren’t Humans Furry? Because stone-age moms ignored ugly hairy babies

People often think that I make up some of the things that I tell them. Suppose I told you that the reason humans are the only hairless apes is because mothers in the stone age used to ignore ugly hairy babies and favor the pretty hairless ones if there needed to be a choice. Would you believe me? Well, a respectable, award-winning paper is saying so. And I have the links to prove it.

Harris’ paper describes Stone Age societies in which the mother of a newborn had to decide whether she had the resources to nurture her baby. The newborn’s appearance probably influenced whether the mother kept or abandoned it. An attractive baby was more likely to be kept and reared.

Harris’ theory is that this kind of parental selection may have been an important force in evolution. If Stone Age people believed that hairless babies were more attractive than hairy ones, this could explain why humans are the only apes lacking a coat of fur. Harris suggests that Neanderthals must have been furry in order to survive the Ice Age. Our species would have seen them as “animals” and potential prey. Harris’ hypothesis continues that Neanderthals went extinct because human ancestors ate them.

See full article. You can also see the original paper.

“Poorism”: Tourism in Dharavi

An interesting article on a new trend in tourism – “Poverty Tourism”, or “Poorism”. People pay money to get guided tours of slums like Dharavi in Mumbai, or the favelas in Rio de Janeiro.

Since January of last year, a young British entrepreneur, Christopher Way, and his Indian business partner, Krishna Poojari, have been selling walking tours of Dharavi as if it were Jerusalem’s walled city or the byways of Dickens’ London. There seems to be a market for this sort of thing: almost every day during the recent December holidays, small groups of foreign travelers, accompanied by Poojari or another guide, tramped through Dharavi’s fetid alleys in a stoic quest for…What? Enlightenment? Authenticity? The three-hour excursions are slated for mention in a forthcoming Lonely Planet guide, and they cost about $6.75 a head—more if you want to go to Dharavi by air-conditioned car.

See full article.

Why a lot of medical research is bogus

The Economist has a great article on why a lot of medical research is bogus. He used the same statistical methods that typical medical researchers used, and applied them to data of a Toronto hospital to come up with the following results:

PEOPLE born under the astrological sign of Leo are 15% more likely to be admitted to hospital with gastric bleeding than those born under the other 11 signs. Sagittarians are 38% more likely than others to land up there because of a broken arm. Those are the conclusions that many medical researchers would be forced to make from a set of data presented to the American Association for the Advancement of Science by Peter Austin of the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Toronto. At least, they would be forced to draw them if they applied the lax statistical methods of their own work to the records of hospital admissions in Ontario, Canada, used by Dr Austin.

This is obvioulsy bogus. But the same methods are being used to show various connections by medical researchers all over. The basic issue boils down to statistical validity of drawing a conclusion from data available. The probability of Sagittarians being 38% more likely to break their arm is rather low, leading one to believe that this is a statistically significant conclusion. However, when you realize that Dr. Austin tried 24 different hypotheses (“Sagittarians are more likely to break their arm”, “Leos are more likely to break their arm”, “Sagittarians are more likely to get gastric bleeding”, “Leos are more likely to get gastric bleeding”, etc.), the probability that at least one or two of them will give results that seem pretty improbable increase significantly. This is usually not taken into consideration by the researchers.