Lewandowsky's latest smear paper gets pulled from the journal website

Readers may recall these two recent WUWT stories:

Tonight I’m pleased to report, that one skeptic who stood up and complained about Lewandowsky’s libelous claims, has had an effect.   – Anthony

Lewandowsky – Strike Two

Guest post by Jeff Condon (originally published on the Air Vent) Hat tip – Skiphil.

So Dr. Lewandowsky did it again.   He, and his coauthors, falsely used my name in order to support some kind of psychology paper on climate skeptic bloggers titled – “Recursive fury: Conspiracist ideation in the blogosphere in response to research on conspiracist ideation.” There were a lot of false (and funny) claims against bloggers on the internet, however, the Lewandowsky team chose to again single out my name in particular regarding specific false attributions of beliefs regarding the global temperature record. Readers will recall that in his previous contributions to scientific understanding, Lewandowsky et al. had made the claim:

and climate deniers believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming (e.g., Condon, 2009).

Being surprised at the accusation, I pointed out in multiple emails to Dr. Lewandowsky that the Air Vent blog has published many articles using those exact records (here for instance) both on line and in peer-reviewed literature and no such claim regarding global temperature had ever been made by me. I have even created on-line global temperature results which have been compared favorably to many of the professionally funded series by others publishing global temperature series for climate science. A short chain of emails ensued where I explained in detail how my scientific positions have never supported his accusation.  After a short while, with no hope of resolution, I was forced to go directly to the editor of Psychological Science, who eventually agreed to remove the citation.

Dr. Lewandowsky has agreed to remove your citation not because it was misleading–he does not believe it was–but because I think it is best replaced by a source other than a blog post. Any other blog post cited in the manuscript is also being replaced, for the same reason. … Eric Eich

Like pulling teeth right?

Humorously, the Air Vent was the single blog which made the citation list.  I am not a naturally vindictive person so I took the editor at his word and let the matter rest.  I have not had time to  follow through as to whether the citation removal was completed, however Stephan Lewandowsky has continued to link to the unpublished original, University of Western Australia hosted, libelous document.

It seems that Lewandowsky is apparently less forgiving than I have been.  He recently published a new paper based on blog reactions to his previous scientific breakthrough.  This new paper astoundingly contained an even less supportable claim:

“Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent on climate blogs, such as when expressing the belief that temperature records show warming only because of systematic adjustments (e.g., Condon, 2009) …..”

My bold!

I would link to the paper, except that his new editors were far more rational than Eric Eich, and on notification, have simply removed the paper from publication.   They have additionally agreed to remove the false reference before any publication continues. Original link here.   I am impressed with the quality of the Frontiers in Psychology Journal response, and  hopefully Lewandowsky will now let the unfounded personal attacks rest.

As Dr. Lewandowsky and his team were aware, the conspiracy claims against me regarding the adjustment of temperature records were unsupported.  This is was a psychology paper of which I am at least an “alleged” subject.  A misrepresented data point, like so many other bloggers, who’s identity was unethically revealed.   Since I did originally take the time to inform Lewandowsky of my actual opinions on temperature records, and since he was fully aware that the article in question did not support his claims, it is my opinion that Lewandwosky and his coauthors intentionally introduced false data into a peer-reviewed paper.  Ironically for a paper on conspiracy ideation based on others (read non-authors) pre-conceived bias, the authors scientifically irrational accusations were completely unnecessary to the point their paper purports to make…..

.. unless one believes in the Lewandowsky conspiracy.

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Mark Bofill
February 6, 2013 7:22 pm

Jeff Condon you need to get your mind right. Obviously you’ve got a severe case of counterfactual thinking and constipational ideation going on if you didn’t even realize that you’ve been arguing that the temperature records only show warming because of adjustments. This can be corrected by an aggressive course of shock therapy and large daily doses of LSD, combined with intensive study of materials presented on the S.k.S website.
/sarc
Well done sir, BTW I admire your blog very much.

Mark Bofill
February 6, 2013 7:23 pm

Jeff CONDON excuse me. I hate it when that happens.

Skiphil
February 6, 2013 7:26 pm

Good response, Jeff! Amazing (but not surprising, really) that Lewandowsky could continue to be so reckless. For the True Believers, who really think they are in a street fight ala Michael Mann and Peter Gleick, the end justifies any means. We can expect worse to come from Lewandowsky et al., but at east you made them take notice.
P.s. It is right around the one year anniversary of the misbehavior of another miscreant in the Mann-styled Climate Wars, Peter Gleick. One year later and Gleick has skated merrily away from his malfeasance with hardly a ‘tsk tsk’ from his allies and enablers. This would be a good month for blogs to press journalists and the US Dept of Justice to revisit these matters.

RockyRoad
February 6, 2013 7:29 pm

Congratulations, Anthony. You know you’ve made it to the top of your craft when the opposition identifies you by name.
Now, what were the names of these sophomoric perpetrators of nefarious misdeeds? I forget…

February 6, 2013 7:29 pm

When are you going to cover “Condensation Driven Winds” – also at Condon’s site?

February 6, 2013 7:30 pm

As the ‘science’ slips away from them, Warmists are desperately trying to deflect attention away from the failure of their predictions. This is but noise and fury signifying nothing.

Alex Heyworth
February 6, 2013 7:38 pm

Jeff, it might pay you to consider retaining counsel in Australia to advise on the potential for a libel action. Australian libel laws are pretty strict.
Might seem a bit extreme, but nothing shuts such people up better than contemplating an expensive libel payout.

davidmhoffer
February 6, 2013 7:51 pm

Congrats Jeff! Well done!

pat
February 6, 2013 8:03 pm

congrats jeff.
more good news:
Barclays, Deutsche Bank lose top carbon analysts: sources
LONDON, Feb 6 (Reuters Point Carbon) – Investment banks Barclays and Deutsche Bank have parted ways with their leading carbon analysts, sources at both firms told Reuters Point Carbon on Wednesday, as banks continue to pare back activity in the battered emissions trading market…
http://www.pointcarbon.com/news/1.2173589?&ref=searchlist

Cole
February 6, 2013 8:07 pm

The paper is still up.

JunkPsychology
February 6, 2013 8:10 pm

Is the “Recursive Fury” article being taken down permanently by Frontiers in Psychology? Or just long enough to get the false claim about Jeff Condon’s views removed from it?
The excerpted quotation from ambitgambit leaves out one set of ellipsis dots that ought to be present, and creates a highly misleading impression of what the original blog post said.
Careful cross-checks of the article’s other quotations from blogs may reveal further distortions.

Tom J
February 6, 2013 8:16 pm

For whatever reason on earth could Lewandowsky’s ‘contribution’ to any form of knowledge advancement possibly be worth any degree of monetary compensation however minute that compensation might be? I’m real serious here. What breakthroughs, insights, revelations has he developed in his chosen field, and to the benefit of the world? Nothing. Nothing. Nothing at all. If he had any insight at all he might recognize the embarrassment he is to himself.

February 6, 2013 8:21 pm

Well done bro. When I read that reference I had a good chuckle and figured you’d be all over Dr. Loo’s sorry butt. he could have written an interesting paper on conspiritorial ideation taking examples from all sides (big oil, etc ) and showed how the internet has a tendency to foster such thinking. That would have been interesting. My sense is the ethics committees at those boys universities should get some mail.

u.k.(us)
February 6, 2013 8:24 pm

I’ll give the good Doctor the “recursive” part, but the “fury” part seems to be a projection.
—-
Fury:
intense, disordered, and often destructive rage

The Erinyes are usually called the Furies, in English. For those using the Greek names, they are often referred to euphemistically as Eumenides “gracious ones.” The Furies pursued particularly heinous criminals and drove them mad with their pursuit.
Just saying.

February 6, 2013 8:31 pm

He still has it posted at his web site.

February 6, 2013 8:47 pm

Jeff,
I am given to understand that defamation is a crime in Australia. As Lewandowsky’s preachings appear on a web site hosted (on behalf of) the University of Western Australia, it would be subject to such laws.
Perhaps Lewandowsky can come to appreciate that even ivory towers (eventually) offer no defence under the rule of law.

February 6, 2013 8:51 pm

They got the con bit right! are they now saying that cover-ups, lies and dishonest people don’t exist?
hmm, A strange cognitive inference is a foot!

John F. Hultquist
February 6, 2013 8:56 pm

M Simon says:
February 6, 2013 at 7:29 pm

Two years ago; oh, wait.
You likely mean the recent publication of the paper here:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/01/21/an-appeal-to-the-climate-science-blogosphere/

February 6, 2013 9:02 pm

Tom J on February 6, 2013 at 8:16 pm
“What breakthroughs, insights, revelations has he developed in his chosen field, and to the benefit of the world? Nothing. Nothing. Nothing at all. If he had any insight at all he might recognize the embarrassment he is to himself.”
Wow, that’s perfect. I feel sadness for the man, but that doesn’t keep me from hoping that he is relieved of his position of employment.

JunkPsychology
February 6, 2013 9:10 pm

Anthony,
It would be great if there is a resubmission requirement with some teeth to it.
But, to put it mildly, the article in its current form doesn’t look like the product of rigorous review— and one has to wonder how strict the peer review process is for anything that gets submitted to Frontiers in Psychology.

February 6, 2013 9:13 pm

Mods can I post it? lol
REPLY: Sure, Anthony

Lil Fella from OZ
February 6, 2013 9:13 pm

They think they can operate how they so desire without respect to persons or for that matter the law. (Notice I didn’t include ‘science.’) Strike one against them!

jeez
February 6, 2013 9:18 pm

Jeff, while you’re in communication with the editor, you should probably call attention to the biases and qualifications of the reviewers that were likely “suggested” by Lewandowsky.

Lew Skannen
February 6, 2013 9:36 pm

Good result.
I suspect that after a while serious journals will tire of acting as the toilet wall upon which errant schoolboys wish to scrawl their latest juvenile rants.

Michael D Smith
February 6, 2013 9:38 pm

While skeptics have a deep appreciation of science, we often assume opponents have the same commitment to uphold the scientific method and have the ethics to maintain high standards. As we see in so many examples, this is often not the case, and truth is far less important to many promoters than carrying out the agenda. We may even view it as conspiracy-like because we simply can’t see how so many so-called professionals could act so badly unless they are actively coordinating actions together that the rest of us would consider inconceivable as individuals. At least I feel that way.
Ultimately, the ones with science AND integrity on their side will carry the most influence. Most people I’ve talked to who think we have a planetary emergency are quite happy to switch sides once they understand how badly they’ve been misled. After all, most regard the truth as far more important than projecting a cool image to others about saving something that they find out later is not in need of saving.
Integrity is absolute. Thanks for defending it Jeff.

ZT
February 6, 2013 10:02 pm

I wonder if the editor will soon be forced to resign…
…and of course…Lewandowsky is bitter because Al Jazeera did not buy his pitiful organ ‘www.ShapingTomorrowsWorld.org’ with their lavish oil derived budget and poodle groomers.

BB
February 6, 2013 10:27 pm

I reject your reality and substitue my own!

DGH
February 6, 2013 10:39 pm

Yeah but the original Lewandowsky man on the moon paper has yet to be published. Quite a house of cards he’s building.

February 6, 2013 10:43 pm

Well done Jeff; persuing an Australian legal angle could be quite advantegous, given the actions undertaken so far in response to your enquires…

Dr K.A. Rodgers
February 6, 2013 10:48 pm

As at 1940 hours New Zealand Summer Time on 07 February the article was still posted on the Frontiers’ site and can be found by a site search for “Lewandowsky”. The subsequent blog comments make reference to Jeff’s concern.
The blog also conatins a mention from Cook that the full paper is now available at
http://www.shapingtomorrowsworld.org/Lewandowsky_2013_Recursive_Fury.pdf
It is there with posts from all the gang Down Under. Have a look at “Our Authors”. The site is supported by Uni W.A., Curtin and Murdoch universities. Wonder what their VCs think.

February 6, 2013 10:49 pm

The abstract is still posted here:
http://www.frontiersin.org/Personality_Science_and_Individual_Differences/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00073/abstract
Several interesting additional developments and observations.
First, the paper was submitted Nov. 5, 2012 – and not “accepted” until Feb. 2, 2013.
Second, the Editor of the paper is Viran Swami, whose work (Swami 2009) much of Lewandowsky’s work is directly based on, and builds on. A large share of the survey questions came directly from Swami 2009.
The interesting part is, if I recall correctly, there were two reviewers listed originally – Elaine McKewon and another – now that other reviewer name has been removed and Viram Swami is listed as the 2nd reviewer.

Citation: Lewandowsky S, Cook J, Oberauer K and Hubble M (2013). Recursive fury: Conspiracist ideation in the blogosphere in response to research on conspiracist ideation. Front. Psychology 4:73. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00073
Received: 05 Nov 2012; Accepted: 02 Feb 2013.
Edited by:
Viren Swami, University of Westminster, United Kingdom
Reviewed by:
Viren Swami, University of Westminster, United Kingdom
Elaine McKewon, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia

February 6, 2013 10:52 pm

As of today there have been 4,806 views of the Abstract page … the paper itself has been pulled, however John Cook has helpfully offered a link to it here:
http://www.shapingtomorrowsworld.org/Lewandowsky_2013_Recursive_Fury.pdf

February 6, 2013 11:42 pm

As he is claiming to be a psychologist – and bringing thinking psychologists into disrespect perhaps you might want to complain to the Australian Psychological Society about his improper conduct as well. I note that he is not a practising psychologist as he is not registered with AHPRA but I suppose he is a member of the APS.

James Sexton
February 7, 2013 12:03 am

I don’t know….. Jeff, good on you for sticking up for what you’ve stated and not stated. It’s a horrible thing for people to misrepresent people’s positions, especially by supposed professionals. We’ve all had it happen to us. But…….
At some point, doesn’t it occur to us skeptics that we’re the ones lending this idiot credence? Surely, like Jeff, it would have “gotten my goat” had that imbecile misrepresented what I’ve stated. And, I would have been P.O’d to the point beyond civility. I mean, I never heard of Lewdy until he gained notoriety here. Can’t we just point and laugh at him? Can’t we use him as a shining example of what an alarmist is? I mean he’s demonstrated that he’s very little math skills. He’s demonstrated a willingness to lie, and lie just about anything.
He’s a dishonest cretin. This is demonstrable. Let the warmists have him. Tie Lewdy around their neck. If they want to quote him and put him in the media, good! Put Lewdy’s fingerprints on every warmist thing you can and then present him to the public. Do so especially anytime a warmist “journalist” quotes the barely functional moron.
Lewdy = win for skeptics!!! 😉

February 7, 2013 12:03 am

Psychology is not a science it is a pathology of the mind whereby the gurus try to project their sense of reality onto those that actually live in reality. This man has the mind of a fifteen year old projecting his fantasies into the world using tax payer money in the fantasy world of the useless part of academia. In the real world he has no worth, thus no job, it is a good time in Australia to stir the pot, our unions and government are under police investigation for fraud, our sports are caught in major drug investigations, people are being arrested for kiddie fiddling, big investigation.
Time to clean out academia also, a little law suit would go a long way at this time, sue him for libel the uni will cave in and sack him.

February 7, 2013 12:16 am

Recursive fury? More like repulsive foray. Are there no depths these warmists can’t/won’t plumb?

February 7, 2013 12:22 am

Of course climate scientists don’t fraudulently adjust past temperatures to make global warming look worse than it already is. Nobody on this blog ever said anything like that.
[Reply: Translation: “Look! Over there! A kitten!” — mod.]

Peter Miller
February 7, 2013 12:28 am

A Scott
These are Lewandowsky’s reviewers for that paper, i don’t think any further comment is needed.:
1. Viren Swami: Papers published – mostly on perceptions of the female body form
http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=viren%20swami%20university%20of%20westminster&source=web&cd=4&cad=rja&sqi=2&ved=0CDwQFjAD&url=http%3A%2F%2Fscholar.google.co.uk%2Fcitations%3Fuser%3DuGoJwWcAAAAJ%26hl%3Den&ei=f1kTUbOnEfGR0QWb04HABw&usg=AFQjCNFmrYhG1VJ0Z-ZrgU_3PItXoHzRrQ
2. Elaine McKewon Two publications: I think these titles speak for themselves.
McKewon, Elaine (2012) ‘Talking Points Ammo: The use of neoliberal think tank fantasy themes to delegitimise scientific knowledge of climate change in Australian newspapers’, Journalism Studies 13(2), 277–297 (UTS staff or students only)
McKewon, Elaine (2012) ‘Duelling Realities: Conspiracy theories vs climate science in regional newspaper coverage of Ian Plimer’s book, Heaven and Earth’, Rural Society 21(2), 99–115 (link opens external site)

February 7, 2013 12:30 am

Sometimes I can be a bit slow on the uptake so I’d appreciate it if someone could clarify this point for me.
Jeff caught Lew out because Lew wrongly stated that Jeff asserted on his blog that historical temperature records had been tampered with by Warmists and Jeff never made such claim.
Did I get that right?
Because over the years I have come to understand that Warmists HAVE in fact altered historical temperature records in their efforts to make the present seem warmer…indeed I’ve seen pieces right here on WUWT to that effect.
Did I get that right too?
None of this alters my low opinion of Lew but did Jeff get him on a ‘technicality’?

David, UK
February 7, 2013 12:30 am

I do see Lewandwosky, like Gleick, as a sicko with no sense of reason or perspective, not to mention a hugely dominant ego. Sick [snip . . site rules, it is still legible . . mod]. If he wasn’t such a buffoon he’d be dangerous.

February 7, 2013 12:51 am

“Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent etc…”
Why is it that all the worst people talk or write in language that’s like a bad German translation?

Bobl
February 7, 2013 1:17 am

I must say the latest Lew paper is definitely recursive, he demonstates supposed conspiracy ideation by proporting a supposed sceptic conspiracy to derail climate science. This is Bizarre. No sceptic in my experience has ever done anything of the sort – In fact most sceptics in my experience are trying to put Climate Science back on secure scientific footing – I think Lew is guilty of the only Conspiratorial Ideation here – perhaps he should look inward to understand why he believes these fairytales.

David Bailey
February 7, 2013 1:23 am

Surely there must be ethical restrictions preventing people writing psychological papers about named, living people without their permission? I’d have thought it might be worth at least asking a lawyer.
One letter from a solicitor might be enough to stop both the the journal and Lewandowsky permanently.
My belief in the honest of science sinks by the day as I follow this climate nonsense 🙁
Keep up the good work, Anthony!

Admin
February 7, 2013 2:17 am

A. Scott and others discussing the reviewers. Here are the original reviewers before the editor apparently added himself. (This in itself is very troubling and may need to be reported to the head of the Journal).
Here are the reviewers of this paper:
Michael J. Wood, University of Kent, United Kingdom
Elaine McKewon, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
Reviewer Wood gets 6 citations in the text of the Lewandowsky paper and reviewer McKewon gets 5 citations. What’s not to like from the reviewers point of view? It doesn’t matter whether the paper should be hung on the outhouse doorhandle to get the most out of it.
http://uts.academia.edu/ElaineMcKewon
http://www.kent.ac.uk/psychology/people/woodm/
A grad student and a “post graduate” researcher….
(This is compiled from Billy Liar’s comments on another thread).
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/02/05/lewandowskys-bear-baiting-behavior/#comment-1217665
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/02/05/lewandowskys-bear-baiting-behavior/#comment-1217682
So they pulled the graduate student with these credentials:

Research Interests
My research interests generally centre around the topic of conspiracy theories. How do conspiracy theories differ psychologically from more conventional explanations for events? Where do they come from, how do they spread, and how do they affect the communities in which they arise? My doctoral research will investigate these questions both in a laboratory setting and through examination of online conspiracy communities, which are fertile grounds for the growth of non-mainstream belief systems and alternative narratives of why the world is the way it is. I am also interested in cults, belief in the paranormal, automatism and the ideomotor effect, and recovered memory.
Thesis Title
Understanding beliefs in conspiracy theories
Supervisor
Karen Douglas
Funding
School of Psychology, University of Kent

kim
February 7, 2013 2:24 am

Whom the Recursors would destroy, they first make furious.
===========

Lew Skannen
February 7, 2013 2:33 am

I remember the tragic story about an English rock musician. It turned out that he had mental problems which were going untreated because nobody detected anything out of the ordinary. Whatever mad thing he did was dismissed as the kind of thing that rock musicians do.
Eventually he overstepped the mark and was arrested. Only then was it discovered that he was rather nuts.
I wonder whether a similar condition affects particular academics.

Eugene S Conlin
February 7, 2013 2:42 am

Off topic – http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/education-minister-schavan-has-ph-d-revoked-in-plagiarism-scandal-a-881707.html “German Education Minister Annette Schavan’s Ph.D. thesis declared invalid and her doctor title revoked.”
… if only this would happen to Lewandowsky and Manne

David L
February 7, 2013 2:46 am

mosomoso on February 7, 2013 at 12:51 am
“Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent etc…”
Why is it that all the worst people talk or write in language that’s like a bad German translation?”
It’s bafflegab. WUWT had a great link to some research into it a week or two ago. People tend to believe it if it sounds important even if they don’t have a clue what it means.

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 4:11 am

Charles Gerard Nelson:
Your post at February 7, 2013 at 12:30 am says and asks in total:

Sometimes I can be a bit slow on the uptake so I’d appreciate it if someone could clarify this point for me.
Jeff caught Lew out because Lew wrongly stated that Jeff asserted on his blog that historical temperature records had been tampered with by Warmists and Jeff never made such claim.
Did I get that right?
Because over the years I have come to understand that Warmists HAVE in fact altered historical temperature records in their efforts to make the present seem warmer…indeed I’ve seen pieces right here on WUWT to that effect.
Did I get that right too?
None of this alters my low opinion of Lew but did Jeff get him on a ‘technicality’?

Jeff Condon objected to a blatant lie – not a “technicality” – in the paper by Lewandowski.
The difference between what Condon has said and the assertion in the paper is a fundamental difference of fact. That difference is of the same kind as the difference between, e.g.
(a) ‘The recorded amount that was stolen has been altered’
and
(b) ‘The theft reported to the insurers did not happen’.
All the global temperature data sets are often altered such that recent temperatures are raised and temperatures from decades ago are lowered; e.g. see
http://jonova.s3.amazonaws.com/graphs/giss/hansen-giss-1940-1980.gif
The changes to global temperature calculations increase the temperature rises indicated by the global temperature data sets. And it is reasonable to raise issues of scientific method and propriety when discussing these adjustments to the data.
The disputed statement in the paper says something completely different. It says

Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent on climate blogs, such as when expressing the belief that temperature records show warming only because of systematic adjustments (e.g., Condon, 2009) …..

There is no dispute that global temperature data sets are often altered by adjustments and that these alter the degree of recorded global warming. The objected sentence says Condon has asserted there is no global warming indicated by the global temperature data sets except for the rise introduced by the adjustments to the data.
The objected statement is egregious in several ways.
1.
It is factually incorrect but is cited as evidence in a research paper.
2.
The factually incorrect statement misleads about the reality of the subject of the paper.
The paper assesses “conspiracy ideation” and the statement seems to provide evidence of a false belief in a conspiracy (i.e. global warming is ‘made up’ and not real).
3.
It misrepresents the views of Condon as being a believer in a false conspiracy
4.
It is personally offensive to Condon in that its misrepresentation is derogatory of the views Condon expresses on his blog.
5.
Use of fabricated evidence is sufficient reason for withdrawal of any paper from publication. The objected sentence provides a falsehood that has no justification: it is fabricated evidence..
Richard

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 4:12 am

Moderator:
My reply to Charles Gerard Nelson seems to have gone in the ‘bin’. Please retrieve it.
Richard

Wamron
February 7, 2013 4:13 am

Between my studying psychology in the Seventies and working in it again today I find a very great change has happened, as a result of which we may consider the phrase “Psychological Science” a definite oxymoron.
Psychologists are aware of this and are divided among those who think the change is a good thing (calling it Post Modernism and “Qualitative”) and those whose still valid work will eventually come to be seen as an adjunct of the real science of biology. I predict the eventual emergence of the phrase “Behavioural Biology” to refer to what used to be called “Psychology” as a necessary means of distinguishing it from the junk that the latter term has now come to denote.
This would leave such guff as is referred to here its due recognition as patent pseudo-science. In fact, pseudo-something without even a pretense at science.

lurker passing through, laughing
February 7, 2013 5:04 am

Lewandowsky, like most extremists, is not nearly as clever as he thinks.
And it would seem that Jeff has been misled by the magazine’s editors.

page488
February 7, 2013 5:08 am

Don’t get too happy about this. LEW has a PhD.
While that doesn’t exactly resonate with us, it gives him credence in the world of (he-he) journalism.
Ten years ago I remember telling my brother that if the CAGW crowd couldn’t make their case on scientific merit, they would turn to psychology to shut up the opposition.
That’s what is happening now.
Read the history of the Soviet Union to know what comes next! It’s pretty much predetermined.
Jeff’s very brave!

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 5:09 am

Moderator:
The item at February 7, 2013 at 4:12 am implies that my post has been lost in the ‘ether’. This is a repost of it.
Richard
================
Charles Gerard Nelson:
Your post at February 7, 2013 at 12:30 am says and asks in total:

Sometimes I can be a bit slow on the uptake so I’d appreciate it if someone could clarify this point for me.
Jeff caught Lew out because Lew wrongly stated that Jeff asserted on his blog that historical temperature records had been tampered with by Warmists and Jeff never made such claim.
Did I get that right?
Because over the years I have come to understand that Warmists HAVE in fact altered historical temperature records in their efforts to make the present seem warmer…indeed I’ve seen pieces right here on WUWT to that effect.
Did I get that right too?
None of this alters my low opinion of Lew but did Jeff get him on a ‘technicality’?

Jeff Condon objected to a blatant lie – not a “technicality” – in the paper by Lewandowski.
The difference between what Condon has said and the assertion in the paper is a fundamental difference of fact. That difference is of the same kind as the difference between, e.g.
(a) ‘The recorded amount that was stolen has been altered’
and
(b) ‘The theft reported to the insurers did not happen’.
All the global temperature data sets are often altered such that recent temperatures are raised and temperatures from decades ago are lowered; e.g. see
http://jonova.s3.amazonaws.com/graphs/giss/hansen-giss-1940-1980.gif
The changes to global temperature calculations increase the temperature rises indicated by the global temperature data sets. And it is reasonable to raise issues of scientific method and propriety when discussing these adjustments to the data.
The disputed statement in the paper says something completely different. It says

Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent on climate blogs, such as when expressing the belief that temperature records show warming only because of systematic adjustments (e.g., Condon, 2009) …..

There is no dispute that global temperature data sets are often altered by adjustments and that these alter the degree of recorded global warming. The objected sentence says Condon has asserted there is no global warming indicated by the global temperature data sets except for the rise introduced by the adjustments to the data.
The objected statement is egregious in several ways.
1.
It is factually incorrect but is cited as evidence in a research paper.
2.
The factually incorrect statement misleads about the reality of the subject of the paper.
The paper assesses “conspiracy ideation” and the statement seems to provide evidence of a false belief in a conspiracy (i.e. global warming is ‘made up’ and not real).
3.
It misrepresents the views of Condon as being a believer in a false conspiracy
4.
It is personally offensive to Condon in that its misrepresentation is derogatory of the views Condon expresses on his blog.
5.
Use of fabricated evidence is sufficient reason for withdrawal of any paper from publication. The objected sentence provides a falsehood that has no justification: it is fabricated evidence.
Richard

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 5:12 am

Moderator:
There seems to be a problem. As a result of the appearance of my note at February 7, 2013 at 4:12 am I have attempted to repost my reply to Charles Gerard Nelson. That repost also seems to have ‘gone’.
I would appreciate your looking into this. please.
Richard
[Found 2x in the bin – Any others? Mod]

Gary
February 7, 2013 5:29 am

What is it that makes some of these guys so maze-dumb? Even after you show them where the cheese is, they still can’t find it.

February 7, 2013 5:34 am

Lewandowsky seems to be writing autobiographical papers.

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 5:48 am

Moderator:
At February 7, 2013 at 5:12 am you ask me,
“[Found 2x in the bin – Any others? Mod]”
No, those are all. Sincere thanks for your efforts.
Richard

Gail Combs
February 7, 2013 5:55 am

John Brookes says:
February 7, 2013 at 12:22 am
Of course climate scientists don’t fraudulently adjust past temperatures to make global warming look worse than it already is. Nobody on this blog ever said anything like that.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Drive by bear baiting with falsehoods again are we Johnny boy?
You just proved that Academics can even read and comprehend. Nice going!
……
For those who might want to know who Johnny boy is link from Sonny at Jo Nova’s site where Johnny Boy routinely makes his presents felt. Further he is The First-year Physics Unit Coordinator, Academic Staff (Physics) at The University of Western Australia. As someone who is SUPPOSED to be trained in physics, he is not exactly a poster boy for the usefulness of higher education.

Rhys Jaggar
February 7, 2013 5:57 am

I have an acryonym, CACAC and CACAC, but if I were to type it out long-hand, Mr Watts would have it deleted for expletives.
I invite readers to try and work out what it stands for and to cogitate on whether it is an expression suitable for Lewandowsky.

Gail Combs
February 7, 2013 6:05 am

David L says:
February 7, 2013 at 2:46 am
mosomoso on February 7, 2013 at 12:51 am
“Conspiracist ideation is arguably particularly prominent etc…”
Why is it that all the worst people talk or write in language that’s like a bad German translation?”
It’s bafflegab….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Here is the link Bafflegab Pays Scott Armstrong has some really great papers that make Lew’s look like like a child’s temper tantrum in hard copy.
Unfortunately the old website where the were easily accessible no longer exists – grumble.

Radical Rodent
February 7, 2013 6:05 am

I had a look at one of the Prof’s blogs on “Shaping Tomorrow’s World” site, and was going to leave a comment, to be put off by the need to register. So – in the hope that he might sully himself with alternative thinking (or “ideation”), and read parts of this site – you can all peruse it, too:-

In your abstract, you included rejection of the scientific proposition of the link between lung cancer and cigarette smoke. This may well be on the basis that, when 90% of the adult population smoked, 90% of lung cancer sufferers were smokers. Nowadays, only about 40% of the adult population smoke; obviously, it should still be that 90% of lung cancer sufferers must be smokers; but, wait – only 40% of lung cancer sufferers are smokers! While I cannot say that smoking anything will result in no harm, I fail to see why a fall in smoking and a rise in lung cancer rates does not raise questions about the veracity of the original claim.
Of course, you may be of the ideation that this comment is but a part of the conspiracy to downgrade your contributions to science.

Gail Combs
February 7, 2013 6:10 am

A fan of *MORE* discourse says:
February 7, 2013 at 4:05 am
…… for so effectively helping to sustain vigorous public discourse … via a hilariously ineffective WUWT “Whack-a-Mole Strategy” of attempting to quench it!
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Lew’s papers are so bad they need to be highlighted to make sane people question the MSM’s propaganda that skeptics are looney tunes. Once people figure out that scientists often publish fake research and are now being caught at it the better off we all are.

February 7, 2013 6:20 am

The grand irony here is that Lewandowsky likely assumes now that FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY is in the pocket of big oil….

Steve R W
February 7, 2013 6:22 am

Anthony. FYI.
Lewandowsky and Cook lose the plot
WEDNESDAY, 6 FEBRUARY 2013 22:22 PM · 13 COMMENTS
by SIMON
It’s Lew, no it’s Cook, no Lew, Cook, Lew, er, hang on…
[UPDATE 2 [7 Feb, 18.40 AEST]: This is all in the public domain now, so I am sharing it here. The fourth author on this paper, Michael Hubble-Marriott, is the “Mike” who is responsible the Watching the Deniers site (sorry, what are we denying again? Duh). Mike couldn’t contain his glee at being asked to be part of the team, so he revealed it all on his blog. I guess you judge people by the company they keep…]
[UPDATE: John Cook responds in the comments below.]
http://www.australianclimatemadness.com/2013/02/lewandowsky-and-cook-lose-the-plot/

Man Bearpig
February 7, 2013 6:22 am

Perhaps Lewandowski could write a paper on people pretending to be scientists ? A couple of names spring to mind .. Perhaps his close mate John Cook ?

kim
February 7, 2013 6:46 am

John Brookes @ 12:22. Clue is in your word ‘worse’. You still don’t get it, and trying for sarcasm when you don’t get it is analogous, but quieter, than being wrong at the top of your lungs.
===============

February 7, 2013 6:54 am

John F. Hultquist says:
February 6, 2013 at 8:56 pm
Thanks for that. I had missed it. I think.

David L. Hagen
February 7, 2013 6:55 am

Global Warming Limmings
The real challenge is to quantify the obvious Lemming Effect among global warming alarmists (aka the IPCC). i.e. examine why ALL four IPCC projections have been systematically high. See Ira Glicksman
An animated analysis of the IPCC AR5 graph shows ‘IPCC analysis methodology and computer models are seriously flawed’

However, net warming between 1990 and 2012 is in the range of 0.12 to 0.16˚C (indicated by the black arrow in the animation). The central predictions from the four reports (indicated by the colored arrows in the animation) range from 0.3˚C to 0.5˚C, which is about two to five times greater than actual measured net warming. . . .
As Feynman famously pointed out, when actual observations over a period of time contradict predictions based on a given theory, that theory is wrong!

The IPCC projections show sustained SYSTEMATIC (aka “bias”) Type B Standard Error in global warming models. True objective scientific models would result in be randomly distributed predictions about the mean of the resultant actual temperature trend. This is a massive failure by the IPCC to apply the scientific method to correct these obvious errors.
Quantify and Expose the Global Warming Lemmings
This presents a major opportunity for innovative social scientists to explore:
WHAT happened versus what was predicted (“projected”) – quantify this systematic Type B error
WHO was involved in making this error – distinguish global warming “alarmists”, from “warmists” “luke warmists” and “realists”.
HOW were alarmists involved in perpetuating this serious breach of the scientific method.
Lewandowsky et al. are examples of this last perpetuation of breaching the scientific method – by the rhetorical device of accusing global warming realists of “conspiracy”.

vigilantfish
February 7, 2013 7:17 am

David Bailey says:
February 7, 2013 at 1:23 am
Surely there must be ethical restrictions preventing people writing psychological papers about named, living people without their permission? I’d have thought it might be worth at least asking a lawyer.
——————-
This occurred to me too, before reading your comment. Since this is a psychology paper, rather than a climate science paper, and Jeff Condon is being used as a subject, it is an absolute requirement by university ethics panels that he be presented with a form outlining the purpose of the study, the purpose of his participation in the study, and overall study parameters. Jeff Condon then should have to sign the form in agreement to allow his information to be used, and this form submitted to the university ethics committee, prior to any publication. Or perhaps Australia does not have the same red tape for such studies? (red tape with which I agree in this case). I have to go through this to interview scientists for my historical research, and, unlike Lewandowsky, I am trying to learn from my subjects, not malign them.

Gail Combs
February 7, 2013 7:30 am

This particular article is about the Jonestown Massacre Conspiracy Theory but the information is relevant to this discussion.

“Dispensing With The ‘Conspiracy Theory’ Label” by Bryan Sacks
….Here is what Moore says about conspiracy theories in general:

The conspiracist begins with the completed puzzle, however, rather than its pieces, or in Timothy Melley’s phrase, “the master narrative” (Melley 8). Although Melley says that conspiracies are “hermetically sealed,” I would assert that conspiracy theories are also hermetically sealed, due to a worldview which abhors both coincidence and ambiguity.12

Now, there are those who forward what may be called “grand” or “world” conspiracy theories that describe, as Daniel Pipes’ formulation puts it:

a powerful, evil and clandestine group that aspires to global hegemony; dupes and agents who extend the group’s influence around the world so that it is on the verge of succeeding; and a valiant but embattled group that urgently needs to stave off catastrophe.13

….These “grand” formulations are often wildly speculative and wholly unconvincing. My contention thus far has been to argue that when one is presented with an evidentiary argument that claims the existence an operational conspiracy, resorting to the “conspiracist” charge is a kind of avoidance.
Later, Moore continues the assault on conspiracists, saying that:

Almost by definition, conspiracy theorists exhibit dualistic thinking, the us-versus-them mentality. How could one consider compromising with conspirators? The idea is unthinkable. Those running the conspiracy seek power and fortune at the expense of everyone else. They are inherently evil.14

Again, this is not responsive to the claim of any particular operational conspiracy hypothesis. But when it comes to a discussion preconceived notions, it should be noted that two can play this game. For instance, one might read Moore’s work and speculate that for reasons having to do with the closeness of the tragedy to her, she begins from a “completed puzzle” with respect to the question of whether the majority of the adult deaths at Jonestown were chosen or the product of criminal coercion. Is this fair? Whether or not one believes it to be, conclusions about the motivations of a discussant should not be sufficient to dismiss their claims without hearing the evidence they assemble….
Ultimately, Hougan makes the winning point in his response to Moore: follow the evidence, wherever it leads. I would add that when an effort is made to hide the evidence, as it has been at Jonestown, expect a wider band of speculation. Pathologizing that speculation in toto contributes, purposely or not, to an environment of protection for those who have the power to act secretly to great effect, and then to keep the record of their secret action hidden from public view.
In a democratic republic, the presumption should be with the value of full disclosure at all times; the case for classification or secrecy should have to be made in each case in which its requested, with a very high threshold needing to be met. We have strayed so far from that commonsensical approach that when it is suggested on the record that the system of secret classification may be being used to cover up terrible crimes, the claim is likely to be met with rolling eyes and caustic dismissals, as if one has suggested a “reptilian agenda” or something. But perhaps we should not be surprised at this, since the same term – “conspiracy theory”– is used to describe both specific and often credible claims of government crime, as well as claims that the Freemasons have held secret control of world politics for centuries, or that Dick Cheney is a Lizard Person, and many other sorts of lurid nonsense.
Which is why we would do best to dispense with the term “conspiracy theory” altogether.
(Bryan is an Adjunct Professor, in the Department of English and Philosophy, at Drexel University…..

This guy may be a professor of English and Philosophy, but he has a better handle on ‘Conspiracy Theories’ than Lewandowsky does.

Craig Loehle
February 7, 2013 7:34 am

As a freshman I started out in psychology. After reading about 50 books, I concluded that it was lots of fun but you could make a good story saying anything at all (and gibberish also), so I got out and started taking calculus and physics etc. I now pat my 20yr old self on the back for having good sense.
On of the flaws in the Academy is that profs get insulated by tenure from any feedback from reality. You can really be a crazy old coot and still be a professor. The idea that ethics is central has been lost. I recently saw a quote from Freud to the effect that the ethics of the profession required one to never interfere with the political or religious beliefs of patients–boy have they lost that guideline. Now they view anything other than athiesm and left-wing politics as a pathology.

February 7, 2013 7:38 am

“In a basic moral sense, where does the blame belong?”
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2012/05/25/the-real-bastards/
There’s nothing new, about the likes of Lew.
Pointman

John Whitman
February 7, 2013 7:42 am

Jeff,
Thank you for keeping the spotlight on the feeble intellect of Cook and Lewandowsky.
They actually believe their paranoid ‘ideation’? If so then they are irrelevant to climate science, it has moved past their crude bias. If they don’t believe their own paranoid ‘ideation’ and are acting for PR purposes then they are very bad actors.
John

JunkPsychology
February 7, 2013 7:47 am

The replacement of Wood by Swami as a reviewer for the Frontiers in Psychology paper is odd, to say the least. Does this mean, for instance, that they threw out an actual review by Wood and replaced it with an actual review by Swami?
There is no prohibition against criticizing living persons in the pages of psychology journals. It happens all the time, as you might expect when many of the topics are controversial.
Most editors, however, would discourage or prohibit authors from presenting psychiatric diagnoses of their critics.
Lewandowsky, whose training is in cognitive psych, not in anything clinical, has taken to slinging around the word “ideation.” An unusual word, used mostly by psychiatrists, and always implying that mental process under discussion is deeply pathological…

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 9:46 am

Pointman:
Your post at February 7, 2013 at 7:38 am says

“In a basic moral sense, where does the blame belong?”
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2012/05/25/the-real-bastards/
There’s nothing new, about the likes of Lew.

Thankyou for your wonderful essay at that link. I commend it to everybody.
As it says and explains

This is real history, real facts, it all actually happened and it all happened to ordinary human beings, such as you and I. It’s history, but it’s not the history that’s taught in schools, and it’s exactly the sort of history that should be.

Oh, yes.
Again, thankyou.
Richard

graphicconception
February 7, 2013 9:51 am

Swami paper: “German translation and psychometric evaluation of the Body Appreciation Scale”
I think Bo Derek was in the film version of that!

MikeN
February 7, 2013 10:18 am

How does he source a blog post as Condon 2009, when the blog post says Jeff Id?
Are we allowed to use Foster now?

Doug Proctor
February 7, 2013 11:13 am

Is it a conspiracy thought if you hold that adjustments to temperature records are inappropriate and/or technically incorrect? if you hold that the assumptions behind adjustments are false, which makes the adjustments mathematically correct but misleading?
I think you have to say that persons doing something wrong do so with knowledge of their error and with the intent to draw another to a known false conclusion before you can use the word “conspiracy”. When you give the benefit of the doubt to your preferred solution, you may be in part self-serving, but then both William James and Albert Einstein would say that you can do this if it leads to a better end than not doing so: much of “truth” is first recognized on a gut level, after all.

Gary Pearse
February 7, 2013 11:14 am

“Ideation” Sheesh, does the dictionary need this for psychology to go forward. I guess when you have little beef in your research it helps to invent “scientific” words as well as invent data points. I note that Lewandowski – a data-cooking psychologist, is publishing more papers on climate science than the once prolific hockey team. I guess he thinks data-cooking is legitimate climate science, following the hockey team’s lead.

Gail Combs
February 7, 2013 12:14 pm

Pointman says:
February 7, 2013 at 7:38 am
“In a basic moral sense, where does the blame belong?”
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I am with you on that 100% and though the same, I hope others read your link.

Mark Bofill
February 7, 2013 2:26 pm

Pointman says:
February 7, 2013 at 7:38 am
“In a basic moral sense, where does the blame belong?”
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2012/05/25/the-real-bastards/
There’s nothing new, about the likes of Lew.
Pointman
—————————————-
Well done.
Mark

A Green
February 7, 2013 3:06 pm

It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming.

A. Scott
February 7, 2013 3:36 pm

This most recent pile of Lew has earned mention at “Annals of Improbable Research” … home of the Ig Nobel Awards …
“A new study tries to focus on fury on the Internet that’s defined by fury on the Internet … ”
http://www.improbable.com/2013/02/05/recursive-fury-on-the-internet/

Green Sand
February 7, 2013 3:53 pm

This is neither science nor even an exhibition by a trick cyclist, it is a plain, simple, and by the measure of the reactions it is getting, a rather successful diversionary tactic.
When the day is going against you – divert their attention!
Leave it alone and the paper, complete with stains and perforations, will return to the roll all by itself,

richardscourtney
February 7, 2013 4:06 pm

A Green:
Your post at February 7, 2013 at 3:06 pm says

It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming.

Total fail! There is nothing “ironic” and nobody needs to “believe” because it is a certain fact that “temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted” in a manner which does “exaggerate warming”. See
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/01/23/a-question-for-zeke-hausfather/
And none of that is relevant to the importance of the falsehood which required the ‘pulling’ of Lewandowsky’s latest paper by the publisher. Please read my above post at February 7, 2013 at 4:11 am which explains the serious and egregious falsehood in that paper.
Richard

AndyG55
February 7, 2013 4:37 pm

One could say that Lewindopey et al have dropped another log, and its the same colour and smell of the first one.
Flush it before it matures. !

February 7, 2013 6:03 pm

It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming.
The FACT that they have been adjusted is not in doubt. The only question is legitimacy.

markx
February 7, 2013 6:49 pm

A Green says: February 7, 2013 at 3:06 pm
“…..It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming….”
I think we all accept that they have been adjusted. Some adjustments may be legitimate, but I would really appreciate it if you could specifically explain some of the more extreme ones to me.
The two degrees adjustment in Darwin, Australia would be a good place to start:
(GHCN homogeneity adjustments to Darwin Airport combined record
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/the-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/)

I am sure you have investigated all these fully and completely, and that you understand and can explain the timing, mechanism and amount of the adjustments. I am sure you would not just come in here spouting something you had been told, would you?
I look forward to your detailed reply, because I would really like to know.

DaveA
February 7, 2013 6:51 pm

In Opposite World the Australian newspaper ‘The Age’ would have a headline article about this telling their readers about Lewandowsky’s much criticized paper(s) and its struggled attempts to get published. They would tell us how much money he receives at the UWA and how much has been chewed up on grants to fund this kind of ‘research’. They would also tell us that this comes hot on the heals of the embarrassing retraction of the Gergis paper last year. In Opposite World…

Jeff Alberts
February 7, 2013 9:11 pm

Every cop is a criminal
And all the sinners saints

I would add a line, and every psychologist insane
With apologies to Mick and the boys.

February 8, 2013 12:12 am

Richard Courtney.
Thanks!

Peter Hannan
February 8, 2013 1:38 am

Hi Wamron, agree completely with your comments. As far as I can see, the scientific psychologists (psychology is not yet a science in the proper sense) are making connections with cognitive scientists and neuroscientists, with the aim of placing psychology on a surer footing, relating it specifically to biology and evolution. Unfortunately, others, who have a lot of influence, are falling into relativist and idealist / solipsist postures such as certain forms of constructivism, and social constructionism. Scratch a relativist and you’ll find an absolutist.

rogerknights
February 8, 2013 9:21 am

markx says:
February 7, 2013 at 6:49 pm

A Green says: February 7, 2013 at 3:06 pm
“…..It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming….”

I think we all accept that they have been adjusted. Some adjustments may be legitimate, but I would really appreciate it if you could specifically explain some of the more extreme ones to me.
The two degrees adjustment in Darwin, Australia would be a good place to start:
(GHCN homogeneity adjustments to Darwin Airport combined record
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/the-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/)

Another place he could look would be at the dodgy adjustments in Iceland:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/10/15/ghcns-dodgy-adjustments-in-iceland/

Matt G
February 8, 2013 12:45 pm

A Green says: February 7, 2013 at 3:06 pm
“…..It’s ironic that loads of skeptics (surely including commenters here) DO believe that temperature records have been illegitimately adjusted to exaggerate warming….”
Care to explain the difference between HADCRUT 3 and HADCRUT 4 and how the difference can only be explained by including more polar data above 82.5N?

JunkPsychology
February 8, 2013 3:04 pm

Curiouser and curiouser.
After delisting Wood as a reviewer and adding Swami, Frontiers in Psychology has tacked on still another reviewer for “Recursive fury”:
Reviewed by: Prathiba Natesan, University North Texas, USA
Viren Swami, University of Westminster, United Kingdom
Elaine McKewon, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia

markx
February 8, 2013 6:47 pm

It appears I am out of date (below) … those Darwin annual average temperature figures were from GHCN V2, it appears that in GHCN V3 the ‘homogenization adjustment’ has been largely removed (adjusted?) for Darwin, as has the warming trend there.
I guess we can now safely say the series had been wrongly adjusted to show a warming trend?
Whoever said observant and detailed bloggers never do any good?
http://diggingintheclay.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/willis-was-right-and-ncdc-agrees-no-wild-adjustments-at-darwin/
markx says: February 7, 2013 at 6:49 pm
The two degrees adjustment in Darwin, Australia would be a good place to start:
(GHCN homogeneity adjustments to Darwin Airport combined record
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/the-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/)

http://diggingintheclay.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/willis-was-right-and-ncdc-agrees-no-wild-adjustments-at-darwin/

A. Scott
February 9, 2013 1:21 am

JunkPsych – interesting – that change occurred sometime late today.
At least its someone with apparent statistics expertise – an asst. professor. According to her CV her last peer review was 2010 and appears her work primarily in educational psych domain.
https://faculty.unt.edu/editprofile.php?pid=1693
That said – to me – as a layman – didn’t appear there was much statistical analysis involved in The current Lewandowsky “Recursive” paper …

February 9, 2013 6:26 am

@A Scott and JunkP – indeed, I wonder what Natesan’s views of the statistics in the original LOG12 paper would be?

JunkPsychology
February 9, 2013 11:30 am

I had the same thought.
Dr. Natesan is an educational statistics expert.
And there isn’t much of statistical interest in “Recursive Fury,” while there was lots in LOG 12.

A. Scott
February 9, 2013 12:08 pm

Ruth – your comment is well founded, and the answer would be illuminating, again, especially considering that there was essentially no statistical analysis in the present paper. The question becomes then why they removed one reviewer, after the article was posted online, then added the Editor as a reviewer, and days later added a 3rd reviewer whose primary apparent value to review would be her statistical analysis knowledge.

Steve McIntyre
February 11, 2013 10:26 am

When I looked today, the new third reviewer had been removed from the roster. So there have now been four rosters of people who had supposedly reviewed the paper:
Wood and McKewon
then Swami and McKewon
then Natesan, Swami and McKewon
then Swami and McKewon again

A. Scott
February 11, 2013 11:41 am

JunkP … you might also note that the current article – it really isn’t a “paper” IMO, makes a number of pretty much silly, self serving claims, along with a handful of apparent outright falsehoods.
Starting with the most basic premise of the paper – that LOG12 was targeted by the conspiracy crowd. . The authors use the fact that their LOG12 paper drew considerable and widespread notice and criticism, compared to the 21 other similar papers they note, as the basis for this alleged scholarly work.
The REASON it drew attention was because it was designed and intended to do just that. A sensationalized, inflammatory and denigrating title being the biggest example. IMO that was the primary intent – more “punative psychology” … the authors are unabashed critic’s – activists who attack all who dare disagree with them. Up to and including publishing the “Debunkers Handbook.”
Not a one of the other papers they noted had a remotely similar inflammatory title. And although I have not read them I think its safe to say none of them used a thinly supported minor finding as the title of their paper.
Its funny too – most of the “conspiracist ideation” claims made in this paper by the authors could easily be applied to the authors behavior – examples include:
1. The acerbic and taunting responses to criticism, and denigration of those who have the audacity to question them, as posted by several of the authors in their own blog
2. The authors response towards those critical comments – the systemic banning of almost every commenter on their blog critical of their work, using increasingly draconian “violations of comment rules” as an excuse.
3. The activities of author Cook thru his Skeptical Science site, and the reactions from the membership there.
4. The discussions and comments by author Cook, and other members, in the “secret forum” at his SKS – where the discussions clearly show conspiring to affect the discussion on climate. Cook states he was working directly with Lewandowsky on several schemes intended to slant or corrupt the discussion of climate science. He also discusses a potential automated “bot” that could be used to alter the discussion
5. The highly partisan activism and advocacy by Lewandowsky and Cook against the entire community of people who are skeptical of the science behind the anthropogenic cause claims regarding global warming – as evidenced by the various speeches, commentary, media articles and the like – but most prevalently displayed by their “Debunkers Handbook”
If and when it finally appears, it will be interesting to see the title of the paper.

A. Scott
February 11, 2013 4:06 pm

what a tangled web they weave …. 😉