The madness of 97% 98% consensus herds

UPDATE: comments welcome on Dr. Richard Tol’s draft paper on this issue, see below. This will be a top post for a day, new posts will appear below this one – Anthony

“Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one.”

That is from Charles Mackay in his book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds first published in 1841.

I think it is an apt description of the process that led to Cook et al. (2013) Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the scientific literature because that paper is in fact, a product of a crowd evaluating a crowd. As an example, Dr. Richard Tol has just discovered that using Cook’s own data, the consensus number Cook should have published is 98%, rather than 97%.

Dr. Tol writes in a critique of the Cook et al. paper:

In fact, the paper by Cook et al. may strengthen the belief that all is not well in climate research. For starters, their headline conclusion is wrong. According to their data and their definition, 98%, rather than 97%, of papers endorse anthropogenic climate change. While the difference between 97% and 98% may be dismissed as insubstantial, it is indicative of the quality of manuscript preparation and review.

He shows the Cook data as he compiles it: 

Tol_table1

You’d think such simple elementary errors in data would have been caught in peer review, after all, that is what peer review is for.

I think that there was a goal by Cook and his crowd, and that goal was to match the 97% number that has become a popular meme in the literature and the media. This intent seems confirmed by a recent statement by one of the co-authors, Dana Nuccitilli in a media argument that 97% global warming consensus meets resistance from scientific denialism

However, we have used two independent methods and confirmed the same 97% consensus as in previous studies.

It is that branding of “denialism” by Nucciltelli to Dr. Tol, who is hardly a “denier” on climate change even by the loosest definition, that has given Tol incentive to now start systemically deconstructing the paper. It also lends a window into the mind of the coauthor Nucitelli, who can’t seem to assimilate useful criticisms, no matter how valid, but instead publicly attributes discovery of real errors in the Cook et al. paper to “denialism” rather than the self-correcting process of science. Nuccitelli’s actions suggest to me, a mindset of zealotry, rather than one of discovery. His actions of branding Dr. Tol’s and others valid criticisms, seem to fit the textbook definition of the word:

zealotry_definition

As an aside, it seems truly laughable that the Guardian has created an entire regular opinion column based and named on this 97% number, and it supports that idea that this was the “target number” rather than the number that the actual data would report. Richard Tol has just proven their own data doesn’t even match the title of their paper. Will the Guardian now correct the title?

98_pct_Guardian

Tol goes on to say this about the crowd-sourcing:

The results thus depend on the quality of the volunteers. Are they neutral observers, or are they predisposed to endorsing or rejecting anthropogenic climate change? Did they suffer from fatigue after rating a certain number of abstracts? 12 volunteers rated on average 50 abstracts each, and another 12 volunteers rated an average of 1922 abstracts each. Fatigue may well have a problem. This level of effort by a volunteer could indicate a strong interest in the issue at hand.

Indeed, and he backs this up by saying it is evident in the data:

WoS generates homoskedastic data. Rating made the data heteroskedastic. Sign of tiredness or manipulation.

So which is it? Tiredness or manipulation, or perhaps both? Based on what has been observed so far, I’d say there is a combination, but given the obvious 97% target, more likely it is an unconscious manipulation by the chosen crowd of volunteer reviewers, which included no climate skeptics and consisted of mostly insiders for Cook’s antithetically named website, “Skeptical Science”. Tol goes on to comment:

No neutral person would volunteer to do 1922 tasks. Cook’s data duly show bias: 35% of abstract were misclassified, 99% towards endorsement.

http://twitter.com/RichardTol/status/341086919930830848

To support the idea that bias played a role in reaching the conclusions of the Cook et al. paper, there seems to be a systemic sloppiness in the sampling process, as Tol points out in his critique:

In fact, 34.6% of papers that should have been rated as neutral were in fact rated as non-neutral. Of those misrated papers, 99.4% were rated as endorsements. It is therefore reasonable to assume that the volunteers were not neutral, but tended to find endorsements where there were none. Because rater IDs were not reported, it is not possible to say whether all volunteers are somewhat biased or a few were very biased.

Tol also says this about the 97% scientific consensus claim:

It is a strange claim to make. Consensus or near-consensus is not a scientific argument. Indeed, the heroes in the history of science are those who challenged the prevailing consensus and convincingly demonstrated that everyone thought wrong. Such heroes are even better appreciated if they take on not only the scientific establishment but the worldly and godly authorities as well.

Well known examples of this include the challenges to the theory that Earth was the center of the universe, that infection was spread by surgeons who didn’t wash their hands, that the Earth’s crust had plates that moved, and that gastric ulcers were caused by a bacterial infection, and not stress as physicians once widely believed. As William Briggs writes:

There was once a consensus among astronomers that the heavens were static, that the boundaries of the universe constant. But in 1929, Hubble observed his red shift among the stars, overturning that consensus. In 1904, there was a consensus among physicists that Newtonian mechanics was, at last, the final word in explaining the workings of the [universe]. All that was left to do was to mop up the details. But in 1905, Einstein and a few others soon convinced them that this view was false.

Consensus can also cause disaster, as NASA proved with a consensus of management that solid rocket booster O-rings affected by unusual cold weren’t worth worrying about or that a foam strike during launch wouldn’t damage the wing of the space shuttle and were “not even worth mentioning”.

Clearly, the power of thousands in agreement on scientific consensus can’t stand up to stubborn facts and that is the self-correcting process of science which sometimes works slowly, other times dramatically quickly. Given that consensus by itself means nothing in the face of such facts, it seems to me that consensus is just another manifestation of herd-like thinking as illustrated by Mackay.

From the Amazon summary of Mackay’s insightful book on crowds:

First published in 1841, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds is often cited as the best book ever written about market psychology. Author Charles Mackay chronicles many celebrated financial manias, or ‘bubbles’, which demonstrate his assertion that “every age has its peculiar folly; some scheme, project, or fantasy into which it plunges, spurred on by the love of gain, the necessity of excitement, or the mere force of imitation.” This still holds fast today! Among the alleged ‘bubbles’ described by Mackay is the infamous Dutch tulip mania, the South Sea Company bubble and the Mississippi Company bubble. And what do bubbles do? Why they burst of course.

The Cook et al. paper bubble is about to burst.

UPDATE: Read the draft paper Tol is working on here, comments welcome:

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0Bz17rNCpfuDNM1RQWkQtTFpQUmc/edit

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Txomin
June 2, 2013 8:31 pm

The dictionary definition of bigot is also “A prejudiced person who is intolerant of any opinions differing from his own.”
The bit about “scientific denialism” is pure delusion. Inquiry, no matter how pertinent or misguided, is at the very core of science and, regardless of the scope of the topic under inspection, it is factually impossible for it to constitute a questioning of science as a whole.

June 2, 2013 8:41 pm

Gary Hladik,
That nonsense talk Gary. Make a serious list of Gary’s basics that all warmists and skeptics agree on, including WHERE THEY AGREE.
Then we can talk consensus, er, what did you call it? Sheesh….non-controversial!
This is political nonsense so far.

SAMURAI
June 2, 2013 8:54 pm

The CAGW hoax has endured due to the “C” portion of CAGW not being not being honestly explained by the MSM, politicians and AGW zealots.
The CAGW-zealot scientists will continue to get their grants and CAGW-zealot politicians will continue to get their “Carbon” taxes as long as taxpayers fail to understand the salient point is whether or not climate sensitivity is OVER 2C.
With few exceptions, even the most rapid CAGW zealot will admit that if CO2 climate sensitivity falls under 2C, the “debate” is over and CAGW theory is invalidated.
The Otto et al paper was an excruciating powerful kick to the groin of CAGW zealots as it postulates a best-guess climate sensitivity at 1.3C and was written by 14 authors/coauthors of IPCC AR reports, making it counterproductive to call them “deniers”.
The fact that there has been no statistically significant warming into the 17th year, despite roughly 40% of all manmade CO2 emissions since 1750 being emitted over the last 17 years, is even more difficult to explain away.
Given that CO2 is now at 400ppm, which is 43% of CO2 doubling, and factoring in the logarithmic function of CO2 forcing, roughly 50% of climate sensitivity has already been obtained, while the HADCRUT4 anomaly stands at a laughable 0.40C and UAH at an hilarious 0.10C.
Given these realities, an excellent case for CO2 climate sensitivity being less than 1.0C is not only possible, but highly probable and at this level of climate sensitivity, CAGW belongs on the trash heap of failed theories.
With the current solar cycle the lowest since 1906, the next solar cycle from 2020 projected to be the lowest since 1645, the PDO in its 30-yr cool phase since 2008, the AMO projected to enter its 30-yr cool phase from around 2020, extreme weather at 100-yr average incidence and a string of cold winters and cool springs all conspire to invalidate the CAGW hoax.
“Time is on our side”, as the Rolling Stone’s song says.

Climate_Science_Researcher
June 2, 2013 10:58 pm

 
[snip – more Slayers junk science from the banned DOUG COTTON who thinks his opinion is SO IMPORTANT he has to keep making up fake names to get it across -Anthony]

Man Bearpig
June 2, 2013 11:17 pm

manicbeancounter says:
June 2, 2013 at 1:07 pm
Man Bearpig says: June 2, 2013 at 12:35 pm
Perhaps ‘skeptical science’ is the right moniker for Cook and his website.
I disagree. John Cook has said
—————————
I meant that people should be sceptical about what they find there 🙂
The definition for religion also seems quite appropriate 😉

TeaPartyGeezer
June 2, 2013 11:34 pm

Nullius 1:28pm … Interesting paper. Since you found this one, is there any way you could find the 2010 paper and provide a link? NEVERMIND! I found it …
http://ncseprojects.org/files/pub/polls/2010–Perspectives_of_Climate_Scientists_Concerning_Climate_Science_&_Climate_Change_.pdf
Konrad 5:15pm … Excellent. Good points. Sound reasoning. IMHO.
David Grove 7:27pm … Good point … except now the politicians have it and intend to institute draconian measures which can only diminish our way of life. Like a dog with a bone, they have no intention of letting go.

June 3, 2013 12:17 am

The longer I look at this paper, the weirder it gets.
The data say 98%. The paper says 97%. The difference is due to 40 reclassified papers (data hidden). The paper says that those 40 were found in a sample (n=1,000) of the neutral papers (N=7970). They seem to have forgotten to scale up the 40 in the sample to population. Had they done so, the headline number would have been 92%.

Mindert Eiting
June 3, 2013 12:32 am

pokerguy says:
June 2, 2013 at 9:08 am
“Many have, but it does no good. I keep hammering away on the need for an actual, statistically valid survey to counter this 97 percent canard, but no one seems interested. More enjoyable I guess, and far easier to sit back and complain about biased surveys..”
I have given my answer at 1:22 pm. This kind of research is called meta analysis. The topic is not the misty PR-concept of consensus but research conclusions. We want to know whether certain conclusions depend on subject area, time of research, and quality of research.
In stead of discussing Cook’s article, based on bad research, or replicating it, skeptics should take the lead and do some good research. For an example, see Donna LF. If we don’t do it, OK, but let’s stop discussing a silly figure.
The research can be done by a small group in which we determine the subject areas and type of conclusions, take the samples, do the research, compute the statistics, and write the article. We need a small team of experts covering the subject areas.The development could be posted here, making crowd review possible. We could begin with a proposal of research areas as can be found in the IPCC publications. Shall we do it or not?

rk
June 3, 2013 12:35 am

I have to stand up for Social Science here. This is way beyond the pale. There are standard techniques and statistics for 1. measuring inter-rate reliabilities and 2. achieving good reliabilities before you conduct the rating experiment.. None of this is talked about in the article…just the end percentage fails…then a clean up step.
Also, i don’t think this would have made it out of Human Subjects Review. Rating this many abstracts is too burdensome to ask people to do. (obviously, their is a quality issue too). That is why we have sampling.
Based on this i don’t think a good Psych journal would have published it. Not to mention the bias in the raters.
Beyond that is the odd non-concordance between the high self-rating of AGW vs. the ratings. The raters mostly saw no position taken…but the authors said, sure we are believers!
I conclude that this is not Social Science, nor Climate Science. it is a rather clumsy attempt at propagandizing the herd of believers…to bolster the troops, so to speak. It is something of an embarrassment that Psychologists took part in this…they really should do a better job.
But….it does not surprise me that most abstracts would contain some boilerplate about the current AGW….I mean, I think that most funding is based on this or that study of the impact of AGW on biology or something else. And even in critical articles, at the end, they’ll always put a good world in for the dominate theory of today.

rk
June 3, 2013 12:43 am

Mindert Eiting says:
June 3, 2013 at 12:32 am
I have given my answer at 1:22 pm. This kind of research is called meta analysis. The topic is not the misty PR-concept of consensus but research conclusions. We want to know whether certain conclusions depend on subject area, time of research, and quality of research.
Well, meta-analysis is way more sophisticated. This paper is just a textual content analysis poorly executed…whereas MA statistically combines each studies statistics to determine if the overall body of work is significant or not.

Mindert Eiting
June 3, 2013 12:56 am

RK: my proposal is meta analysis but we should not make it too sophisticated perhaps. I know a lot about inter-rater reliability but we need quite a big team of experts for the different areas. Apparently, you are interested.

jones
June 3, 2013 1:23 am

So it’s evener worserer than we thought……..?
Or worse than that…

Blarney
June 3, 2013 2:10 am

Frankly, I find all this emphasis on the statistics and calculations in Cook’s paper completely misplaced and distracting from the real issues in this case. Which are two:
1) The cathegorization of abstracts is skewed towards a greater level of endorsement: a generic statement about the fact that greenhouse gasses emissions contribute to climate change is counted as an explicit endorsement, while results according to which “major portion to none of the 20th century warming could result from natural causes” is to be classified as “implicit rejection”. (Table 2.)
2) Classifying the status of the research from abstracts is equivalent to deriving the state of a society from newspaper headlines: there is a disproportionate amount of homicides, rape and violence going on everywhere.
IMHO, any other flaw in the paper is just secondary compared to these two.

Myrrh
June 3, 2013 2:20 am
Arun
June 3, 2013 2:29 am

It may be herd behavior, but I’m not sure pigs towards a trough can be called a herd.
A herd by any other name should smell as…

June 3, 2013 2:32 am

Dr Tol, whom I wouldn’t classify as a climate skeptic, is actually taking back climate science from the shameless propagandists posing as scientists. He’s to be commended for doing so, though I wish he’d started sooner, as did those science heroes of mine like Michaels, Plimer, Giaever, Lomborg, Dyson et al.
Incidentally, you can get a free and legal copy of Mackay’s classic at project Gutenberg by following the link at the end of this piece.
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2013/05/10/some-thoughts-about-policy-for-the-aftermath-of-the-climate-wars/
Pointman

CFI
June 3, 2013 2:38 am

That’s how the Cookie Crumbles

Konrad
June 3, 2013 2:41 am

Doug Cotton says:
June 2, 2013 at 10:58 pm
“Back radiation can indeed slow radiative surface cooling.”
—————————————————————————
It’s too late for that Doug. Way too late. The internet remembers. The PSI thing failed. Game over.
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
 Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit,
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
 Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
As I understand it, tears do not work on the Wayback Machine either. 😉

StephenP
June 3, 2013 3:09 am

Yet we have this comment from Ed Davey, the Energy Secretary, who is hoping to push a bill through Parliament which will force the UK to go carbon free for electricity generation by 2030, just 17 years time, as it will help mitigate climate change! He will need to get China and India on board to go carbon free if he is to have any effect on climate change.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/energy/10095188/Ed-Davey-attacks-papers-who-report-destructive-climate-sceptics.html

Myrrh
June 3, 2013 3:10 am

Pointman – Replace food staples with biofuel crops and let the food riots begin. Refuse to let the developing world have access to better GM seeds, and let the crops fail. Let them starve.
It’s GM crops that are starving them. The monopoly of the market forbidding them from saving their own seeds. The GM crops do not give higher yields, they were engineered to withstand the Roundup produced by the same company. Why not question the hype here too?

StephenP
June 3, 2013 3:27 am

Meanwhile from Roger Harabin at the BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22745578

CFI
June 3, 2013 4:04 am

My advice is to not let the matter drop, same with the Marcott paper, if these papers stand then science falls.

Keitho
Editor
June 3, 2013 4:20 am

Myrrh says:
June 3, 2013 at 3:10 am (Edit)
———————————————————————————————
GM crops do not have any monopoly anywhere. They are designed to make the farmer more profitable by reducing the costs of production requiring less water, fertiliser, herbicide and pesticide, while increasing yields. If the farmer voluntarily decides to use the GMO then he may not hold back seed for replanting which is simply the seed producers business model to which the farmer has agreed.
In the event the farmer wishes to use other, non GMO , seeds such as hybrids he may do so but holding back seeds from those crops results in reduced yields as well. Which is why in those countries where GM crops are banned the farmers by hybrid seeds from Cargill, Monsanto, Syngenta and others rather than simply replant pips from previous crops. They also make him more profitable.
I fail to understand why GM producers like, say, Monsanto are accused of having monopolies which force farmers into doing their bidding. The farmer always, and everywhere, has a choice. Many choose to be more profitable by changing their own farming methods which often include, where allowed, GM seeds.

Chuck Nolan
June 3, 2013 4:42 am

rustneversleeps says:
June 2, 2013 at 8:37 am…………………..
I guess the real question is “which is the herd that has gone mad”? Is it those that acknowledge the overwhelming consensus in the scientific literature? Or is it the herd that stamps its little feet and sticks it fingers in its ears trying to avoid that simple fact?
Inquiring minds want to know…
—————————————-
First, these inquiring minds must decide which group supports the overwhelming consensus in the scientific literature? and the herd that stamps its little feet and sticks it fingers in its ears trying to avoid that simple fact?
I believe this is where the argument remains to be debated.
One group says, “Here’s some evidence which shows man made CO2 might not be the major cause of the global warming indicated in the adjusted temperatures….there may be other factors to explore.”
While the other group says, “Here’s proof, 97% of scientists say the earth is being destroyed and man is generating the CO2 which is the cause. The lands will flood and dry out; the forests will be set afire by the excess heat from man; there will be no food nor water for consumption as we burn this paradise. We must stop this at all costs, including starving and freezing the poor, covering animal habitats with solar panels and filling the sky with noisy bird shredders. (We just don’t want no dams and nukes).”
Tell us rusty “which is the herd that has gone mad”?
cn

FTM
June 3, 2013 5:15 am

I wonder how many of the people that wrote the papers under review were getting grant money from a govern-mental agency. N.B. We have all been told that enviro-mental research conducted by oil companies is biased. If that’s the case then how is enviro-mental research conducted by governments not biased?