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Feb 15, 2024
acx
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4 min 487 words 517 comments 143 likes podcast (5 min)
Scott Alexander tests a hypothesis about gender integration moderating political views using his survey data, finding no significant effect of sibling gender on political attitudes. Longer summary
Scott Alexander examines a claim about gender differences in political attitudes and tests a hypothesis using data from his 2022 survey. The post discusses a reported growing political gap between men and women, and a proposed explanation that increased gender integration might moderate political views. Scott tests this by comparing political attitudes of men and women with only brothers or only sisters. The results show no significant effect, suggesting that sibling gender doesn't influence political views in the way proposed. Scott also discusses potential limitations of using his survey data and mentions other explanations and challenges to the original finding. Shorter summary
May 15, 2019
ssc
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6 min 790 words 95 comments podcast (7 min)
Scott Alexander analyzes a study on lactation fetishes and its critical window theory, using his own survey data to suggest an alternative explanation based on birth order effects. Longer summary
Scott Alexander examines a study by Enquist et al on lactation fetishes, which suggests a critical window theory for fetish development based on exposure during childhood. The study found that lactation fetishists had more younger siblings, seemingly supporting this theory. However, Scott compares this to his own survey data, which shows a similar pattern for intellectual curiosity. He then uses data from the SSC 2019 Survey to test both hypotheses, looking at various fetishes and sibling relationships. The results suggest that having older siblings suppresses fetish formation, rather than younger siblings causing it. This casts doubt on the critical window theory and indicates that birth order effects on openness to experience might better explain the original study's findings. Shorter summary
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