Skeptical Science conspiracy theorist John Cook runs another survey trying to prove that false "97% of climate scientists believe in global warming" meme

People send me stuff. Even though I’m supposed to be on break, I thought this worth a few minutes to post up. I have redacted the recipient address as well as the exact time stamp, and the suffix code in the URL to prevent the sender from being identified by Cook, and face possible retaliation or harassment. Since Jo Nova’s website has yet again been taken down by a hacking DDoS attack, I felt this to be an important step to protect the recipient.  From the language and pre-selection filters imposed, clearly there is no further doubt about the connection of John Cook’s Skeptical Science effort to the advocacy disguised as science going on at the University of Western Australia with Stephan Lewandowsky. Since this was sent using the University of Queenslands public network resource, it is fair game for posting, especially since no caveats for disclosure of the survey are given in the invitation letter.

I found the methodology of the sample selection quite ridiculous:

Our search of the ISI Web of Science database has found X of your papers published between 1991 and 2011 matching the search phrases ‘global warming’ or ‘global climate change’ (noting that due to the specific search parameters, it’s possible that some of your papers may not be included). It’s not essential that you are an expert in attribution of global warming

With all the caterwauling at SkS by Cook himself and elsewhere about my supposedly “non-expert” involvement in expressing my invited opinion on the PBS News Hour, here in Cook’s world, they simply don’t care if you are an expert or not if you have an opinion on global warming/climate change. Such hypocrisy. I suppose we can call this the “cartoonist clause” since Mr. Cook is a cartoonist by trade.

Of course we all know now (after examining the survey and data) that the 97% of climate scientists believe in global warming meme is predicated on just a few responses in a flawed survey, which you can read about here: What else did the ’97% of scientists’ say?

This survey promises to be no better, as it has a flaw in the invitation process that will induce bias. Here’s why.

The survey appears to be sent only to publishers of papers that have shown up in search phrases for  ‘global warming’ or ‘global climate change’. Cook even concedes that:

“(noting that due to the specific search parameters, it’s possible that some of your papers may not be included).”

So with that criteria, what sort of papers and authors will be excluded? Here’s a short, but by no means complete, checklist of papers and author opinions Cooks sampling method will likely miss:

  • Papers/authors that don’t use those two phrases cook deems important because they (or the journal) feel it politicizes or polarizes the paper.
  • Papers/authors that study other natural variation effects on climate, such as ENSO, solar influences, aerosol influences, volcanic influences, etc. that are only studying those effects and don’t use the terms Cook deems important.
  • Papers/authors that study issues, biases, adjustments of datasets that are only studying those datasets and nuances and don’t use the terms Cook deems important.
  • Papers that study climate models that deal with the methods and performance, and don’t use the terms Cook deems important.

And there are probably more examples that I haven’t thought of.

From my viewpoint, Cook’s methodology is fatally flawed, because the search terms act like a data sieve and results in some pre-selection biases for those authors/papers that don’t think twice about using those terms (which are political hot potatoes) in a  science paper. As a result I would expect a greater numbers of “believers” (to quote the PBS label) than non-believers to be selected.

There’s another bias. Cooks states in the invitation letter:

“Our search of the ISI Web of Science databasehas found X of your papers published between 1991 and 2011 matching the search phrases ‘global warming’ or ‘global climate change…”

This starting condition will of course exclude papers in journals that are NOT part of the ISI database, and there are more than a few. So, it becomes a double bias in pre-selection on Cook’s part. This of course means that some of the journals that do gatekeeping, such as we witnessed in Climategate emails, exclude skeptical authors

Here’s the solicitation:

==============================================================

From: j.cook3@uq.edu.au

To: xxxx@xxx.xxx

Sent: xx/xx/xxxx xxxxxx

Subj: Invitation to survey re climate research (closing Oct 12)

Just in case our original email may have gone unnticed, you are receiving this reminder about our invitation to participate in a survey (closing Oct 12) by the University of Queensland measuring the level of consensus in the peer-reviewed literature for the proposition that humans are causing global warming. Our search of the ISI Web of Science database has found X of your papers published between 1991 and 2011 matching the search phrases ‘global warming’ or ‘global climate change’ (noting that due to the specific search parameters, it’s possible that some of your papers may not be included). It’s not essential that you are an expert in attribution of global warming – we are interested in whether your paper explicitly states a position on anthropogenic global warming (AGW), makes implicit assumptions about AGW or has no position. You are invited to categorise the topic of research and level of endorsement in each paper. You will not be asked to supply your private views but merely to categorise your published research. To participate, please follow the link below to the University of Queensland website.

http://www.survey.gci.uq.edu.au/?c=xxxxxxxxxx

The survey should take around 4 minutes. You may elect to discontinue the survey at any point; your ratings will only be recorded if the survey is completed. The rating must be done in one uninterrupted session, and cannot be revised after closing the session. Your ratings are confidential and all data will be de-individuated in the final results so no individual ratings will be published. You may sign up to receive the final results of the de-individuated survey.

The research, titled The Consensus Project, is being conducted by the University of Queensland in collaboration with contributing authors of the website SkepticalScience.com (winner of the Australian Museum 2011 award for Advancement of Climate Change Knowledge). The research project is headed by John Cook, Research Fellow in Climate Change Communication for the Global Change Institute at The University of Queensland.

This study adheres to the Guidelines of the ethical review process of The University of Queensland. Whilst you are free to discuss your participation in this study with project staff (contactable on +61 7 3365 3553 or j.cook3@uq.edu.au), if you would like to speak to an officer of the University not involved in the study, you may contact the Ethics Officer on +61 7 3365 3924 or humanethics@research.uq.edu.au.

Regards,

John Cook

Global Change Institute/University of Queensland

Skeptical Science

================================================================

And here are screen caps of the introduction and questions:

The drop downs are interesting, first the drop down that tells them what sort of paper it is:

Note the “Not peer-reviewed” highlighted answer. I found this laughable. He’ll accept an opinion from an author of a non-peer reviewed paper, but by the pre-selection filter of choosing only ISI Web of Science accredited journals, that answer will likely never occur. Here’s why:

The Thomson Reuters Journal Selection Process

By Jim Testa, VP, Editorial & Publisher Relations

updated 5-2012

Why Be Selective?

It would appear that to be comprehensive, an index of the scholarly journal literature might be expected to cover all journals published. It has been demonstrated, however, that a relatively small number of journals publish the majority of significant scholarly results. This principle is often referred to as Bradford’s Law.2

Peer Review

Application of the peer-review process is another indication of journal standards and signifies overall quality of the research presented and the completeness of cited references.6 Inclusion of Funding Acknowledgements is also strongly recommended. Not only do they help create a greater context for the journal, these acknowledgements also function as a confirmation of the importance of the research presented.

Source: http://thomsonreuters.com/products_services/science/free/essays/journal_selection_process/

It seems pretty clear to me a non peer reviewed journal would not be selected (for inclusion in the ISI database). Thus skeptical papers that were forced (by the active journal gatekeeping we have witnessed) into journals that didn’t meet ISI’s criteria or simply were not peer reviewed, likely would not be included in Cook’s survey results.

Though the fact that Cook included “not peer-reviewed” as an option for paper author that he would accept means that he’s now bereft of any rational argument when it comes to peer reviewed -vs- non peer reviewed findings.

Here’s answers the authors could give, which are the same no matter which pulldown is first selected.

This new survey by Cook is yet another flawed and transparent advocacy effort to use predetermined opinion gathering as a public relations tool with the help of a compliant and unquestioning news media.

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Pamela Gray
September 23, 2012 5:56 pm

This appears tied to research that has been funded by climate change money pots. It seems reasonable that funds used from these money pots must go to research that must include these phrases in their text. Therefore I am unconvinced that this is a random sample of folks with credentials in meterology and/or climatology. My hunch is that an investigation of the researchers who end up being invited to the party have common funding sources. Huge bias fail in terms of research standards.

Goldie
September 23, 2012 5:59 pm

I would welcome suggestions of journals, that would accept and publish a paper with the keywords “global warming” or “global climate change” that debunked the myth af man made warming.
Surely (and I know I am stating the obvious) this very approach will introduce massive selection bias into the sample. Who would ever believe this nonsense.
I personally believe that the issue comes down to trying to define who is a climate scientist and who isn’t and that comes down to defining climate as opposed to weather. The key issue here, of course, is how does global temperature perform as a surrogate for climate because global temperature is commonly taken as the surrogate. What they mean by a climate scientist is someone who looks at global temperature change, either by modelling or by impirically and of course temperature is not the whole story.

daveburton
September 23, 2012 6:00 pm

http://tinyurl.com/Clim97pct
“Do 97% of experts agree with the IPCC that human CO2 emissions are causing dangerous global warming?”

Goldie
September 23, 2012 6:01 pm

If I published a paper entitled “The change in stickiness of marshmallows with temperature and the potential impacts on the confectionary industry from climate change” would that make me a climate scientist?

François
September 23, 2012 6:11 pm

Arctic minimum. You have been avoiding the issue for a couple of months now. Please explain.
[Reply: This comment should be on the Arctic ice thread. — mod.]

Bill
September 23, 2012 6:12 pm

The main problem with the previous 97% number is (aside from it only representing 75 people) that the questions were very vanilla and did not really ask if MOST of the observed warming was due solely to man-made CO2 AND was going to be catastrophic which are actually the points that most skeptics disagree with.

September 23, 2012 6:18 pm

Putting aside the original political context, Cartoonist Cook brings this song by Paul Simon to mind.

wayne
September 23, 2012 6:36 pm

So, run a survey of all scientists who once stated they believe in “anthropogenic global warming” and then ask them if they still believe in AGW? Sounds like all these alarmists have left is deception.
Of course, the results of this survey probably hinges greatly on whether these ‘scientists’ are still hooked up to the AGW grant gravy train $$$ or not.

Matt
September 23, 2012 6:37 pm

Goldie,
Yes, it would.

François
September 23, 2012 6:38 pm

Sorry, Mod., please, tell me where the arctic ice thread is.
[Reply: Click here. — mod.]

intrepid_wanders
September 23, 2012 6:41 pm

François says:
September 23, 2012 at 6:11 pm
Arctic minimum. You have been avoiding the issue for a couple of months now. Please explain.

Antarctic maximum. You have been avoiding the issue for a couple of years now. Please explain.
Go away…

Pete of Perth
September 23, 2012 6:42 pm

Francois, antarctic maximum. Please explain.

DaveA
September 23, 2012 6:43 pm

Anthony this Consensus Project is described in the secret forum files though it would appear the method has undergone a major overhaul. Previously they were not contacting any researchers instead themselves doing the categorizing. I would think the secret forum release has had something to do with the change.
Consider these early ramblings from John Cook. He’s speaking here before they’ve even begun to collect data. Some how he knew what the result would be before he even started:
(2012-1-12, bold mine)

Beating the drum on consensus
John Cook
One of the major take-homes I took from AGU was the importance of the public understanding that there’s a scientific consensus on climate change. So consensus is a crucial part of climate communication.
I’ve been working on something to do with consensus with Dana and Jim Powell, that will add something new to the literature on consensus – actually go beyond the existing thinking on consensus. What we’re planning is initially one or two peer reviewed papers, then a crowd sourced online feature. The idea is that this will be an extended campaign, regularly beating the consensus drum and reinforcing the message over time. So 2012 for SkS will be a year about consensus, with SkS making an important contribution and hopefully making an impact on the public perception on consensus. Will post more on this shortly…

Prominent feature
John Cook
I’d suggest hold off on a 97% feature on the homepage. My hope is this will be bigger than Doran 2009 and Anderegg 2010 in communicating not just a 97% consensus but a strengthening consensus. It will become an integral part of the SkS site and provide a compelling alternative narrative to the “crumbling consensus” myth.
The Ding et al study is an inside baseball study for communicators, not a paper for the general public. What it tells us is people don’t support climate policy unless they perceive a scientific consensus. However, what SkS is working on is for the general public.

Timescales and strategies
John Cook
Hard to predict a timescale because the first hurdle is getting this first paper by Jim and myself published – we’re going to submit it over the next week but you never know how long that takes.
Next step is the SkS analysis. I’ll be posting about that on the forum ASAP but need to get myself organised first. The plan is a little fuzzy but probably involves getting a paper published then with the release of the paper, also posting some kind of online feature. I’ll be posting our general plans (not set in stone) on the forum soon and hopefully together we can shape together an effective campaign.
I did think about involving Peter Sinclair and/or Stephen Thomson, trying to help promote the results using video. That’s definitely on the cards. And coincidentally, got into some dialogue with someone at Google over the last few weeks offering to help with visualising of data so we’ve already started working on visualising our results. The preliminary stuff is looking pretty damn sexy.
Just one thing – this is not a survey of scientists. This is a survey of the peer-reviewed literature. Think Oreskes 2004 but with an order of magnitude more data, going much deeper, much broader and using SkS to present the results as an interactive, transparent database. The results don’t just find a consensus – they find a strengthening consensus.
It goes without saying – please don’t share any information about this project with others, this is all very preliminary.

September 23, 2012 6:45 pm

“…Our search of the ISI Web of Science database has found X of your papers published between 1991 and 2011 matching the search phrases ‘global warming’ or ‘global climate change’ (noting that due to the specific search parameters, it’s possible that some of your papers may not be included). It’s not essential that you are an expert in attribution of global warming..”
So many words, so little substance.
“…It’s not essential that you are an expert in attribution of global warming…”, yet we only pulled those papers that used the phrases “global warming” or “global climate change”.
If they aren’t experts in the attribution of global warming, then why were the specific words of “global warming” or “global climate change” used?
“…noting that due to the specific search parameters, it’s possible that some of your papers may not be included…”
So it’s possible that you had released dozens of papers about real science, but we’re only going to look at the ONE paper that used the catch-phrase of “global warming” or “global climate change”. And that may be because you were a co-author.
“…Our search of the ISI Web of Science database has found X of your papers published between 1991 and 2011 matching the search phrases “global warming” or “global climate change”…”
So 100% of their papers were drawn from this specific database with only the words “global warming” or “global climate change” considered. From there, they’ve got to exceed the 97% from the previous survey. Anything less than 97% will be seen as a crumbling consensus, and exactly 97% will make people wonder why the 3% still haven’t been converted.
One last comment (from the e-mail):
“…Your ratings are confidential and all data will be de-individuated in the final results so no individual ratings will be published…”
So while there is a privacy aspect, there is also a method of removing the disciplines they’ve surveyed. There’s no way of knowing how many of the papers come from the “classic” climate science disciplines, and how many from “other” sciences.
Somebody needs to check the ISI Web of Science database, to see how many papers total (“X”), between the years 1991 and 2011, match their word search.
I’ll bet anything that the number you find now, WILL NOT match the numbers listed in their final database.

David Ball
September 23, 2012 6:49 pm

François says:
September 23, 2012 at 6:11 pm
Antarctic maximum. You have been avoiding this issue for a couple of months now. Please explain. 8^D

David Ball
September 23, 2012 6:54 pm

— mod. I know, I will head to the Arctic ice thread.

David Ball
September 23, 2012 6:56 pm

Sorry Anthony, when I rejoined the thread, there were no replies. I always defer to you or the mods. Just havin’ a little fun. Hope you are well.

MarkW
September 23, 2012 6:57 pm

All the data that’s fit to fabricate.

Maus
September 23, 2012 7:18 pm

Cook is no more than making use of Consensus Decision Making tools in ascertaining the consensus that has been previously reached by the ‘right people’ though Consensus Decision Making. Or, for those that are uninterested in such things: Cook is simply applying peer pressure to help reinforce the herd. It’s a Sophist’s play in that should enough people admit, under perceived duress, that they believe in the Jabberwock that they and others will are then more prone to swear that they saw it whiffling through the tulgey wood. And so it comes to be Belief. The only subtle catch is that a myth does not manifest reality as a consequence of uttered nonsense.
There should be no surprise that those whose status, money, and peers depend on AGW — pick a model, any model — will state publicly that they believe in AGW. And there should be no surprise that there are sorts such as Cook playing the faithful sheepdog on the matter. All of which is strictly and purely separate from the notion that an experiment says only what it says. Even if you do offer it greater access to money and women.

September 23, 2012 8:20 pm

John Cook apparently is busy writing papers with Lewandowsky – another just in press … imagine that the authors of the Debunking Handbook getting grant money to do what was essentially, to me, a literature review and a “how to” section at the end.
Others can comment better but I saw little or no science in this paper – pure advocacy, or at least advocacy support.

Misinformation and Its Correction
Continued Influence and Successful Debiasing
Stephan Lewandowsky1,
Ullrich K. H. Ecker1,
Colleen M. Seifert2,
Norbert Schwarz2 and
John Cook1,3

Michael Lewis in Sydney Australia
September 23, 2012 8:21 pm

There has been a recent change of Govt in Queensland to one which is strongly conservative and with a large majority. The U of Q is a “state” university – as are most in Australia. I wonder how long it will take to find budget efficiencies with John Cook’s sinecure – if they realise his section – amongst very many other “leftist retirement villages” exists.

September 23, 2012 8:29 pm

I think John Cook will prove that 97% of the people he knows believe this stuff. Eventually people will realize that this proves he should get out more.
On that basis I see nothing wrong with his work and wish him great success.

TomRude
September 23, 2012 9:15 pm

Clearly someone is truly angry at Jo Nova for exposing the Aussie carbon fraudsters and their totalitarian methods… The election campaign has already started by the look of it.

mfo
September 24, 2012 12:45 am

I mentioned this survey to a friend who is a pathologist at a teaching hospital. His immediate opinion was that if he was a scientist studying the climate, he would not have the time to search through his papers to determine precisely what they had stated, assumed or implied. Therefore he suspected that anyone answering the survey would be simply expressing an opinion
unrelated to the actual words in their papers.
He also said that it would be very unwise for any scientist responding to the survey to believe that their identity would remain private. Remember Gleick.

September 24, 2012 12:53 am

September 23, 2012 at 9:15 pm | TomRude says:
Clearly someone is truly angry at Jo Nova for exposing the Aussie carbon fraudsters and their totalitarian methods… The election campaign has already started by the look of it.
———————————–
Not surprising, Tom. The socialists here are a particularly nasty and vengeful strain … you just need to look at what we have for a prime minister and the ‘lame’ stream media. All in a day’s work for them.

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