Lewandowsky’s Peer Reviewer Makes Things Up

Guest essay by Brandon Schollenberger

As most people reading this blog know, a paper by Stephan Lewandowsky, Recursive Fury, was recently retracted. This is a big deal as scientific papers are rarely retracted, and merely being wrong doesn’t cause it to happen. One would instinctively assume that means there was something very problematic with the paper.

That’s not how people are portraying it. Quite a few people have spun this retraction of a paper criticizing skeptics as demonstrating skeptics are in the wrong. One of them is Elaine McKewon, one of the peer-reviewers for Recursive Fury. Unfortunately, she does this by making things up.

McKewon recently published an article you can find here and here. The article contains numerous errors, to the point it grossly misrepresents Recursive Fury. This can be seen in its very first sentence:  

In February 2013, the journal Frontiers in Psychology published a peer-reviewed paper which found that people who reject climate science are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories.

Recursive Fury did nothing of the sort. It didn’t claim to examine relative amounts of conspiratorial ideation in any groups. It didn’t attempt to compare or quantify levels of such ideation. There is no way to read Recursive Fury as doing what Elaine McKewon claims it did. She has simply made this up.

What does it say when a peer-reviewer of a paper makes an obviously untrue claim about what the paper shows? I don’t know. What I do know is it should make everyone question McKewon’s judgment when she says:

Recursive Fury was theoretically strong, methodologically sound, and its analysis and conclusions – which re-examined and reaffirmed the link between conspiracist ideation and the rejection of science – were based on clear evidence.

But that’s not the only basic point McKewon got wrong. She also misrepresents an indisputable fact. Her portrayal of the events leading up to Recursive Fury being retracted is:

Shortly after publication, Frontiers received complaints from climate deniers who claimed they had been libelled in the paper and threatened to sue the journal unless the paper was retracted.

After taking the paper down from its website, Frontiers began its investigation and arranged a conference call so that the journal’s manager, legal counsel, editors and reviewers could discuss how to proceed.

Before the call ended, three academics, including me, argued that scientific journals must not be held to ransom every time someone threatens litigation. In response to our concerns, we were assured by the journal’s representatives that the legal matter would be considered settled once the two sentences had been amended as agreed.

Yet the paper remained in limbo while the journal’s investigation into the academic and ethical aspects of the study dragged on for more than a year.

The important part is where McKewon says “the paper remained in limbo.” Her portrayal holds “the paper remained in limbo” because of threats of legal action regarding two sentences which could be amended to address the complaints. That is a figment of her imagination. Here is what Brian Little, editor for the journal says happened:

The article was removed on February 6th because of a complaint about a factual error. We did due diligence, contacted the authors, had it corrected and it was put up again.

Notice the last part. Little clearly states the paper was put back online after it was amended. McKewon’s portrayal pretends this never happened. This means she can only claim “the paper remained in limbo” because of those supposed “threats of legal action” by ignoring the fact those complaints had actually been resolved.

To see what actually happened, we can simply ask the journal itself. It explains:

I think there’s a misunderstanding: the manuscript was accepted for publication by Frontiers on Feb 2, and the provisional (i.e. non proof-read) PDF was made available immediately, as we do in most cases. Because there was subsequently identified a need for authors, reviewers, editor and associates to review and Chief editors to agree on the modification of one specific line in the text, the provisional PDF was hidden on Feb 6 while this modification was agreed. The paper was then published in the agreed form on March 18, and as you know was subsequently unlinked while we deal with all the complaints and allegations.

In other words, the paper was first taken offline to address the complaints McKewon refers to. Once they were addressed, it was reposted. It was then taken offline a second time in response to other complaints. Those later complaints are what led to the paper remaining in limbo for nearly a year.

Given that, when McKewon asks:

Just how clear would the legal context need to be for Frontiers to stand up to intimidation and defend academic freedom? First, the two sentences discussed in the conference call had been amended as agreed, which satisfied the journal’s lawyer even under the former libel laws.

She shows she has no idea what she’s talking about. She’s created a story which ignores basic facts nobody disputes, facts which even the simplest of research would have uncovered. All she had to do was look at the Retraction Watch article about the paper’s retraction and follow the first link it offers for background. Or she could have asked the journal.

Only, if she had done that, she’d have found the journal says her entire argument is bogus. She claims the paper was retracted because “the journal’s management and editors were clearly intimidated by climate deniers who threatened to sue.” The journal disagrees. It says:

Our decision on the retraction of this article was taken on the basis of a number of factors. This decision had nothing to do with caving in to pressure and was driven by our own analysis of various factors and advice received.

The journal directly contradicts Elain McKewon’s argument. Had she questioned the journal for her story, she’d have known that. Had she investigated or researched the story, she’d have known the paper wasn’t placed in limbo because of the complaints she referred to. And had she reread Recursive Fury, she’d have known it did not find “people who reject climate science are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories.”

But she apparently didn’t do any of that. Even though she describes herself as a “journalism PhD candidate,” she didn’t do any of the basic journalism that goes into doing a story.

And she is one of the people who approved Stephan Lewandowsky’s work for publication.

Go figure?

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JustAnotherPoster
April 2, 2014 9:00 am

“Don’t switch theories. If you have a theory about why GW is wrong, stick to it or not”
“When the facts change, I change my mind”
““The sun doesn’t explain the warming” <— Sigh.
"Stick to the data and methods" <— the data doesn't show catastrophic AGW. The methods had to be pulled though gritted teeth from Mann. His methods are most CERTAINLY questionable. As are all the well documented adjustments to the data by NSDC.
The biggest problem with C/AGW, is 1) The Data — never seems to really back up the initial press releases.
2) The methods. The amount of adjustments to global temperature data is odd shall we say, HADCRUt4 showing different(warmer) than HADCRUT3 for example. Science on food production showing an INCREASE in crop yields. IPCC showing a reduction. The data never matches the headlines.
Publish ALL the IPCC climate model data openly and without question. Let GISS open source its temperature data and methods. They shouldn't have anything to fear. Lots of very clever coders work in the private sector and can figure out all this stuff.

Harry Passfield
April 2, 2014 9:29 am

These two TWEETS from Mckewon are copied from her Twitter feed. Their juxtaposition shows such irony that she cannot see it. Apparently, ‘scientists’ get hate mail; Andrew Bolt has people just ‘mean to him’.


Hate mail, stolen data, hacked servers, lawsuits and death threats – just a day in the life of a #climate scientist”

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

“People have been mean to #AndrewBolt and he’s so ‘scarified’ he doesn’t know if he can take it any more”

richard
April 2, 2014 9:43 am
April 2, 2014 9:59 am

Lewandowsky has the option to write a paper that is essentially an improved ‘Recursive Fury’ and submit to a journal with Mosher’s suggestions (Steven Mosher says on April 2, 2014 at 8:31 am) .
Mosher, you might get a pyschpaper co-authorship out of it with all the perks thereof.
John

Jit
April 2, 2014 10:00 am

As a minimum a reviewer of this paper should have had some grounding in non-parametric statistics – the analysis of questionnaire data is not an easy matter. I don’t know that a journalist was the best choice.

Jit
April 2, 2014 10:02 am

Oh – sorry – this was the follow up? Purely descriptive…?

Gerry
April 2, 2014 10:26 am

“Because there was subsequently identified a need for authors, reviewers, editor and associates to review and Chief editors ..”
“and associates to review” is struck out – why?

Randy
April 2, 2014 11:06 am

You know what. Im going to help out good old lew…
I DO believe there is likely a conspiracy to use Cagw to push global taxation and other political ideals of… whoever. I will make it easy for him. I base this on two main points. First we are told by most, co2 taxes are the ONLY way…..Also, if people such as lew, mann, trenberth, and scores of others actually believe the are following the data rather then trying to fit the data to their beliefs… well then apparently we have scores of entirely incompetent people who somehow rose to the top of this particular field of “science”. It is much easier to believe there is simply an agenda, and that data is secondary to the political goals.
Imagine you are micheal mann, or one of these other folks. I mean some of these folks the entire planets future is in peril if we stay on this path. They spend their time worrying about people who do not currently believe them? (most people WOULD believe in agw well before it was a major issue if it was real and the world was indeed warming consistently) OR what if that same effort was put towards convincing those who DO believe the memes to truly change their lifestyles. International agreements being pushed seek to curb emissions by a few percentage points. What if even half of those who again think the entire planet is in severe danger acted on it? I HAVE changed my lifestyle in relation to the enviro issues I actually believe. If I still believed co2 was a major issue my lifestyle would release almost none of it.
So why the dis connect? If this isnt a political agenda, and saving the very earth itself is the goal, then why dont we see more of a push on those who are already “enlightened” to live up to and be a shining example for the rest of us??? SO yeah, agenda seems much more likely then complete idiocy. If I was on a quest to save humanity from itself Id be much more concerned that those that agree with me will barely even change their ways, rather then those who do not yet see the light. Keep in mind in this narrative, every little bit helps, and “we have no time” and we will continue to see increasing issues, that will convince more and more people….. right??? So why not get the enlightened to act? If not even the enlightened care enough to act, how can you expect the heretics, and plebs to get it?

April 2, 2014 11:06 am

Bernie Hutchins, she was definitely a formal reviewer. She was listed by the journal from the beginning. People just never paid much attention to her name.
Scarface, I don’t doubt Elain McKewon read the paper. That would have been a year ago. It wouldn’t be surprising if she was foggy about it.
rogerknights, I agree. Sadly, that’s a downside of not having an editor read your work before publishing. It’s easy to miss obvious things like that. Then again, I wrote this entire piece in one hour while wanting to go to bed. I’m surprised it came out as well as it did.
Gerry, I’m not sure. It was struck out in the source so I copied it that way.

timg56
April 2, 2014 11:50 am

RE Elain McKewon – She’s a Believer.
What more need be said?

April 2, 2014 11:56 am

I updated this post on my site, and I thought I’d share the update here:

4/2/2014 Edit: I’m happy to say Social Science Space, one of the two organizations I linked to in this post, addressed a complaint I sent them promptly and fairly. They’ve updated their piece to now include the e-mail I wrote to them about Elaine McKewon’s piece. I think that’s the ideal way to handle factual inaccuracies. It lets people see the original mistakes and see the correct information. Feel free to take a look.

I haven’t heard back from The Conversation, but I don’t expect much from them. I’ve tried to get them to fix other factual inaccuracies in the past without any luck. I doubt things will be any different this time.

Merovign
April 2, 2014 1:25 pm

You know, an honest discussion might or might not actually resolve any problems, but it would at least be a novelty.
It is appropriate that we laugh, but sometimes I think laughing at things like “the Conversation” censoring dissent distracts from the sick fact of the behavior.

April 2, 2014 1:47 pm

Brandon Shollenberger said: April 2, 2014 at 11:06 am: ”Bernie Hutchins, she was definitely a formal reviewer. She was listed by the journal from the beginning. People just never paid much attention to her name.”
Thanks Brandon. I saw that from the comment of Barry Woods at 6:28 am today. Quite bizarre. To me being “listed” seems more like a “review editor” than a “peer reviewer”; the latter should almost always remain officially anonymous. But this case seems a wretched outlier in all its aspects.

Bob Koss
April 2, 2014 1:48 pm

I went to this UWA publications page to see how Recursive Fury is described. http://websites.psychology.uwa.edu.au/labs/cogscience/Publications.html
Here is what I find in the two lines they used to describe the paper.
Corrupt journal name. It’s Frontiers [strong]in[/strong] Science, not Frontiers [strong]of[/strong] Science.
Corrupt reference to volume:article in journal. Should be 4:73, not 4.
Corrupt doi number. It’s doi 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00073, not doi 103389/fpsyg.2013.00073.(1st period missing) A search of doi.org will only return a page if the doi is correct.
I suspect Lewandowsky personally wrote those two lines as a demonstration of the quality of his work.

Bob Koss
April 2, 2014 1:54 pm

Arrghhh. Used the wrong brackets in my last comment. Should be…
Corrupt journal name. It’s Frontiers in Science, not Frontiers of Science.

April 2, 2014 2:06 pm

Actually Bob Koss, it’s Frontiers in Psychology.

Txomin
April 2, 2014 2:33 pm

@Mosher. Interesting read, thanks.

Randy
April 2, 2014 3:34 pm

http://www.therightclimatestuff.com/
I wonder if lew knows that the team that put the U.S. on the moon doesnt believe Cagw is an issue? That makes his conspiracy moon claims much funnier.

Eamon Butler
April 2, 2014 3:35 pm

She’s got a conspiracy theory all of her own going on, and will probably make a fine journalist.

Walter Sobchak
April 2, 2014 6:09 pm

“discourse coalitions that permeate the Field of Power which encompasses the political, economic, academic, media and think tanks social fields.”
Awesome. Could be one of the worst sentences ever.

Bob Koss
April 2, 2014 6:24 pm

Brandon Shollenberger,
Oops. Mea culpa.
You’re right. Don’t know what made me type Science instead of Psychology. Old timers disease maybe. The point still stands concerning his own corruption of the journal name. I’d expect him to get that right as that isn’t the only paper they published by him.

April 2, 2014 8:02 pm

Bob Koss, no problem. It’s always embarrassing, but funny, when we make a bigger mistake than the one we’re correcting.
As an update, I received an e-mail from The conversation saying they’ve raised my points with the author and will be looking into them. I don’t know if anything will come of it, but at least it confirms Elaine McKewon is now aware her piece is factually inept. It’ll be interesting to see how she reacts.

April 2, 2014 11:45 pm

April 2, 2014 at 3:35 pm | Eamon Butler says:
She’s got a conspiracy theory all of her own going on, and will probably make a fine<b lying journalist.
There, fixed that 😉

April 2, 2014 11:46 pm

April 2, 2014 at 3:35 pm | Eamon Butler says:
She’s got a conspiracy theory all of her own going on, and will probably make a fine lying journalist.
There, fixed that 😉

Brad Keyes
April 3, 2014 5:16 am

Evidently it’s beyond the competence of journalism students to accurately paraphrase the Abstract of a scientific article. In addition to making a fictitious hash of the findings of the first Lewandowsky paper, McKewon comes up with this weird notion:
“No fewer than 97% of climate scientists now endorse the scientific consensus on the reality, causes and significant risks associated with climate change.”
She embeds in this claim a link to Cook13, which naturally fails to show what McKewon seems to think it does. Cook doesn’t even pretend to know how many climate scientists believe in “significant risks associated with climate change.”
Then again, she hasn’t finished her PhD. I’m sure she’ll have mastered English comprehension by the time her degree is awarded.