Today’s episode of Uncertain is about the ways that studies can leave us overconfident and how “just-so stories” can make us feel overly certain about results that are still a work in progress. And sometimes studies get misleading results because of random error or weird samples or study design. But sometimes science gets things wrong because it’s done by humans, and humans are fallible and imperfect.
Humans and the Amazon: A 13,000-Year Coexistence
The Placement Excitation: Scientific American on The Big Bang Theory
Science Goes to the Movies: A New TV Program
Every Life Has Equal Value, Part 2: Gates Foundation CEO Dr. Susan Desmond-Hellmann
Every Life Has Equal Value, Part 1: Gates Foundation CEO Dr. Susan Desmond-Hellmann
Best of Thanksgiving, Part 2: Let's Talk Stuffing—Your Face!
Best of Thanksgiving, Part 1: Let's Talk Turkey!
Doctors Without Borders Fight on Ebola's Front Lines
Ebola Expert Update
Let's Get Small: A Panel on Nanoscience
Building a Better Microscope: 2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Blue Light Special: 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics
The Map in Your Mind: 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Kodiak Update: Scientific American Alaska Cruise, Part 4
The Juneau Tour: Scientific American Alaska Cruise, Part 3
Juneau Where I Am: Scientific American Alaska Cruise, Part 2
Catch Me If You Ketchikan: Scientific American Alaska Cruise, Part 1
Shakespeare and Science, Part 2
Shakespeare and Science, Part 1
Furious New Science Fiction from Mark Alpert
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