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发表于 2012-8-4 09:48 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
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本帖最后由 bigsnail 于 2012-8-4 10:50 编辑
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( o1 o  f2 m+ C9 J# v- m$ L; `饶毅致《自然》杂志总编的信。
& ]! \) A; j/ L# Z% P( U0 z就像当年傅莹在英国《星期日电讯报》上发文一样,要争取到话语权、影响别人的认识,就得多一点这样的人。
% J3 g6 J% T+ A. @总体上中国对外宣传还是以自己的思维方式,效果不彰。
. u, N) q  t, w  M: J. L3 n4 U4 f/ _" R- Q. ?* B5 Y, @
http://blog.sciencenet.cn/blog-2237-598917.html
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4 L0 B1 l4 l; Y( k9 J5 ?致《自然》杂志总编的信:有关叶诗文的新闻报道  精选
  C3 M0 o; Q4 ?# [) |1 {
5 n4 Q1 p1 Q' G; G! ?英文原信附后,大意如下:" f5 S  _2 k0 y' E) v7 G- t' i  x5 @
5 |6 I& J1 O' ]
斐尔,: d) U2 c8 w6 E" J* g0 h
       你可能因Ewen Callaway对叶诗文的报道而被email狂炸,过去二十小时,给你2 W1 K" h0 p  m' i( z' Y/ a
email的人里面小部分也给我来信。4 n- ]9 ^2 w- k$ L* V9 f
       如果你奇怪《自然》非本质部分一篇报道为何带来这么大的反应,你应该高兴
1 _7 u; w' F5 F% d% N0 ~3 e中文读者比世界其他读者更看重你们的新闻报道,与科学相关的(即使关系很小)也可
: d/ J0 ^$ m1 m" w0 \能重于《纽约时报》,中文媒体报道用你们的新闻也远多于一般西方媒体用你们的新闻。
6 T+ S8 C6 `+ p2 X0 N3 k( O8 h" }, t- J* J       Callaway报道最好也是草率、最差是种族偏见:1)最初的副标题暗示叶可能舞
, [; a, `* W6 u弊; 2)Callaway用了两件事实说明叶惊人地异常,而两件都错了; 3)Callaway没咨询意
( g/ }6 w) Y5 I6 }见不同的专家,导致报道不平衡,低于公平报道的最低标准。所以,Callaway至少不负
, g. ]  w/ f# _- s# K. q责任,可能太快就暗示中国运动员容易舞弊。他肯定没有达到新闻报道的通常标准。/ y" u5 [) j3 F% x  r
       我很高兴看到在我草拟此信的过程中,《自然》可能意识到了原副标题的偏见
8 ^0 _  W) @$ l8 G,将之由“成绩追踪记录有助于抓体育舞弊者”更正为“成绩追踪记录有助于驱散疑问+ i# `: `) Y6 B6 [
”。舞弊的前设改为疑问。
' S, k. m: ]0 O2 M- J" S8 \       Callaway报道用的两个“事实”让叶诗文看起来比真实的要更“异常”:说她/ c6 \( C& H. [! h6 N
比自己在2012年7月的记录要快7秒,说她在最后五十米比男子冠军Ryan Lochte还要快
5 K3 a/ n0 B$ ?% b; y,而后者是男子第二快的世界纪录。: a% L1 Q" }( e  K' w. i
       第一个“事实”错了,第二个误导。1)叶比自己只快5秒,而此前她的记录创于3 p5 m4 r) ]5 |* {
2011年、不是2012年,这位16岁运动员用了一年而不是少于4周刷新自己。2)叶只在混# O4 a9 s# w3 w9 l. r$ H/ c8 u; l* `
合泳400米中最后自由泳一段比Lochte快,而非整个400米。Lochte在400米是世界第二
5 n2 j" M( `5 ~/ i快的记录,叶在400米丝毫不能接近他(慢了二十多秒)。叶只是自由泳最强,而在前8 A% R5 h7 F) |2 o5 y
300米落后于好些女选手。虽然Lochte在400米很快,他在最后50米的自由泳慢于五、六. I" }3 i, p- M. K) {
位男选手。叶最后五十米自由泳也慢于那些男子。所以,叶只在她自己的强项而他的弱" O5 Y0 E6 ~7 q5 [
项快于Lochte。如果Callaway多做的功课,他就难以用这些“事实”来使“问题”醒目5 i! s4 d  R* U+ e2 T: O7 y
。如果Callaway多查询,他就能发现其他游泳运动员也曾在十几岁发育阶段显著提高记
! s( ^# y0 m; ~: r录。这些事实更正后,Callaway的报道就没基础。
* X& r' \! _  f% Z: _还有好些事实,可以让一般读者更理解叶诗文的成绩,我不在此赘述。可以参见《附件
/ |  Q0 v3 `: D# X1》,wikipedia对叶的成就有一个相当快而公平的描述。署名的《自然》报道应该优于
8 I" ]) \; V" aWikipedia。Callaway报道与Wikipedia条目的差别也显示该记者未采访已经公开提出不1 `8 `* ]; K8 R$ T( b
同意见的专家。) p$ n2 }& d7 U: ~5 A
你应该收到了"XXX"博士的一封email。他在发表多篇《自然》和《自然神经科学》的
* _3 L8 i& N7 h第一作者论文后,获得"XX"学院的博士,并因此获有声誉的奖学金到"XX"大
) m5 R3 r. b2 G& J' n; s学做独立的博士后。万一他给你的email埋在你收到的成百上千邮件中,我将其拷贝为
+ g8 i" t4 K4 X- E6 C" s( U8 ~! \《附件2》。他email给了我、要我看看此事。
8 b) r$ v! \1 x& i4 HCallaway在线报道下面有很多跟帖讨论。有些学生以为有些很有道理(且有实质内容)! F% V: K* @+ V
的讨论被删了,他们寄给了我。我选Lai Jiang的一份为《附件3》,Zhenxi Zhang的为/ |5 K* Z" q4 W. Q
《附件4》。你们可以看到学生和一些更有经历的《自然》读者不高兴是有依据的,而
9 Q5 Z$ w. v! E9 m这些被Callaway忽略。
* |; `* y1 a+ w* `9 `2 w7 m英国人常常忘记、而现代华人不易忘记,世界上很多人以为鸦片战争是中国人卖鸦片给
4 h; z% ?' m5 \8 x) Y& c+ _英国人。我自己6月份(这确是2012年)又经历一次,我和一位老朋友(麻省理工学院
) f, g5 u! ^% B7 o教授)在香港开会时,发现她竟然也是这么认为。: M% Z& j$ q) d) q$ f
英国人的国际形象好,部分原因是你们的科学和科学家:当全世界中学生都要从教科书
- G+ ~, M; S) L( h& u学牛顿和达尔文,英国赢得了世界的尊重。《自然》应该以这些伟大(且客观)的科学$ |( b8 f6 p2 `
家建立的传统和声誉为自豪。他们其中有些曾在《自然》发表过论文,才有《自然》的
9 q: j: c! c, c7 w4 T今天。你们如果采取措施修复你们的新闻记者造成的损害,可以加强你们的声誉。/ f8 s9 m3 X7 F/ v9 Z. F1 u* [$ J
英国人从来没因鸦片战争对我们道歉,即使在1997年离开香港时也未显示丝毫悔意。而( j! p* C: E/ W2 s: q; m! W: G
香港是英国在鸦片战争后强迫我们割让的土地。所以,记忆是犹新的,而不仅是1840年4 |3 t2 o" Q# m9 d6 A
代的残余。如果《自然》拒绝承认此报道不公平,可能很难“驱散”英国至上的“疑问! @0 J/ ^9 G7 r' L  @
”(借用《自然》对叶报道的词汇)。( \" L7 ?+ o, b7 I8 W
中国人受形象不佳的牵累。我们也知道我们还有很多感到羞耻的未解决的问题,包括舞
) F8 Q1 H5 k1 G) n" t弊。越来越多的中国人能接受合理与平衡的批评,我们在伦敦奥运会为我们羽毛球的问0 n; D$ ~& v/ I" k: d
题公开道歉就是证据。但我们对缺依据、有偏见的批评还很敏感。叶诗文不过是个16岁2 a* u; J4 j2 w. B. `
的年轻人,本该为自己职业生涯的成就而庆贺。当已知她通过了奥运会赛前、赛中多次4 v2 X* }& A, ~
测试,而毫无证据指责她的时候,却有很多媒体,特别是《自然》这样的刊物,的渲染: T7 @# M0 x+ k9 }+ a1 y
而导致负面舆论多于正面,当然令人深感不平。- U% {8 L" Y* E. F9 t. w2 y  ]) J
我希望你们能澄清记录,发表平衡Callaway报道的意见。
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- [0 k) H5 \+ N) D北京大学生命科学学院 神经生物学教授 饶毅
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! \$ M' R9 S. O; w9 K. M附件1 Wikipedia对叶诗文的总结
0 R( }+ B6 f5 _# Z0 f1 E( _附件2 伯克利加州大学王立明的email: @( [! c' a% r) |
附件3 Lai Jiang在Callaway报道后的意见
5 K. {1 C# z" X# j4 F附件 4 Zhenxi Zhang在Callaway报道后的意见
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9 {6 m% j& B7 ]- U8 n% b原文(2012年8月4日1:57am发送)
+ ^, b, \, b" n  \6 q7 B& B1 gDear Phil,
# i9 {! O9 d9 d! G4 J* F1 J  Q       You might have been bombarded with emails about Ewen Callaway’s! ?- w+ T" n/ O4 W
report on the Chinese Olympic gold medalist Ye Shiwen. Over the last 20
% J/ d: u5 q4 _! mhours, I have received emails from a small fraction of those who had emailed
6 p9 B1 G: }# ~8 Y- G  dyou.( l5 ~& G3 G2 U+ c9 d6 V8 m
       If you wonder why a piece in a non-essential section of Nature have9 P9 u7 u3 D9 V2 ?. e6 G; t
brought you so much response, you should be happy to know that Chinese- v: U' D, R( L& r. |
readers place much more weight in Nature news reports than the rest of the0 {. s$ E  K4 b- N+ s' y
world does. If an event is related to science (even tangentially) and Nature, S3 M6 x+ L% T2 q9 W
publishes a news report, many Chinese readers treat the Nature report more
$ B9 b( C, O- u1 B; c% u; Gseriously than New York Times. Chinese news media also use Nature news
' r0 y- O' v# Q! l; ^4 y4 Apieces much more than the regular Western news media would.
/ Z4 |4 A# R& m       The Callaway report was sloppy at the best and racially biased at the
* l( y7 t  H+ N9 A8 W) @0 yworst: 1) the original subtitle implied cheating on Ye’s part, setting a
$ f* L, G: [$ g2 Anegative tone for the report; 2) Callaway presented two facts to establish1 Y3 N( S6 O# Y0 C7 @2 z
that Ye was strikingly anomalous, but both “facts” were wrong; 3) Callaway5 |! G0 _0 Q% J
did not check with experts whose opinions did not supported the doping
1 X1 O' s& y% c# ~* Lexplanation, and thus did not provide a balance report that is the minimal& J4 _" P! |# e& e; u7 {, I6 r
standard of fair reporting. Therefore, Callaway is at least irresponsible,
0 S2 l. u' G# P3 tand could have jumped too quickly to imply that Chinese athletes were prone. e) q- w3 U" S2 X0 N% }
to cheating. He has certainly not held onto the usual standard of news* B4 d$ N6 P/ ^+ k3 v7 l
reporting.
/ P) i/ P4 z* ?% k- r: @. D; Q! }1 s       I am glad that, while I was drafting this letter, Nature may have
5 _! ^; c/ u8 G: falready noticed the bias in the original subtitle and corrected it by/ o: X+ c. m9 ~  @
changing it from “Performance profiling could help to catch cheaters in8 i- B! F' c( `
sports” to “Performance profiling could help to dispel doubts”. A* T% B' Z) f9 ~! N
presumption of cheating has changed to doubts.1 ]/ T, d8 \7 G
       The Callaway report presented two “facts” which made Ye Shiwen seem
/ ]) u& x" Y  F# Y, D) v" X4 P5 Pmore “anomalous” than she really was by stating: that she was 7 seconds7 r3 i5 l2 ^( w  q
faster than herself in the same event in July 2012, and that, in the last 50
9 E$ _9 w& @8 Jmeters, she was faster than Ryan Lochte, the gold medalist of the same
3 R, D# y0 Q$ U8 g/ jevent for men, with the second fastest record.
1 u3 N* E" k% C2 p       The first “fact” was wrong, while the second was misleading. 1) Ye
3 f) x' }. a+ d& I# lwas only ~5 seconds faster than her own record in July, 2011, giving the 16/ ]) i; @4 R& g5 ]3 }/ S8 g5 X
year old a full year rather than less than 4 weeks to improve her own record
. I' ^  f1 k9 e$ p: g. 2) Ye was faster than Lochte only in the freestyle, not for the entire 400% G6 x8 b! u. `
meters. Lochte’s time was the second fastest for the entire 400 meters," E/ n2 i& |" U8 w- ?
for which Ye was not even close (she was more than 20 seconds slower than- E$ \" c9 r* f0 r
Lochte in 400 meters). Ye was only at her best in freestyle and trailed! s$ V% n' a6 q
behind other women in the same event in the first 300 meters of the- ?+ Y9 Q+ T; |, N9 L
individual medley. While Lochte was the fastest in 400 meters, he was slower* L; K' E- C8 z" k0 R# N: T
than 5 or 6 men in the last 50 meters of freestyle. Ye was slower than
5 F4 y* c* Z! ]1 {" w$ |+ Lthose other men. Thus, Ye was only faster than Lochte in a style that was
* E5 v) J2 |. V. c9 ~4 e/ U/ vher strength and his weakness. Had Callaway done a bit more home work, then
" U! K) P' Y- S0 W1 Rhe would have had a hard time to use these “facts” to highlight the “
! d3 S4 P6 y  Hproblem”. Had Callaway done double-checking, he would have found that other
, l) |( T2 \) V1 f' ]swimmers had significantly improved their own records when they were in the
& n9 W1 p( y: W# }; x% ~! x7 H7 Bteens. Corrections of these facts would have changed the basis for the
# [  M5 x2 a" W4 R4 }Callaway report.7 V# p3 R$ ]2 e* a% p3 F
There are more facts that would have made the performance of Ye Shiwen more; z5 ?0 ]/ X1 |" `" i
understandable to the general readership, which I will not go into details0 Z9 }2 @4 Y: w$ m1 f
here. See Attachment 1 for an amazingly quick and well-balanced description
& ^, X: Y9 L( G" m) Aof Ye’s performance by Wikipedia. Signed reports in Nature should have been
. r4 s" F" A8 A( Y, r; \$ Lbetter than Wikipedia. The contrast between the Callaway report and the
% R& P+ }0 t( @" ~0 c9 d: \Wikipedia item shows that the reporter did not interview experts who had2 y6 t% w" w. j) e8 l
publicly voiced different opinions.
$ u5 l0 ^0 P$ G. S4 C( k/ B! @# \You should have received an email from Dr.XXX, who obtained a PhD
: H1 L* m. `* Dfrom xxx after publishing first author papers in Nature and Nature
/ _9 _' c% F2 k# z" nNeuroscience. He was awarded a prestigious fellowship for an independent
' `3 [; a) P: V- D( Tpostdoc at xxx. In case his email has been buried among the hundreds. B( e& i% e3 c: F7 E8 j
you have received, I am copying it here as Attachment 2. He had sent a copy
% C/ v" p4 \* [% d; J$ bof his email to me and asked me to look at the issue.
( ~7 |2 O" m0 @; r! m( dThere are many online posts below the Callaway report. Some students think
4 N4 f3 t1 {' s/ h  p( {# X  kthat a few very reasonable (and substantive) posts have been deleted. They
5 s4 T: E/ T) `) M2 J3 Ehave sent these to me and I am including one authored by Lai Jiang as
% V( k" |" L, NAttachment 3 and another by Zhenxi Zhang as Attachment 4. You can see that" @) x3 l; ^" \0 ~  D2 |
the anger of students and more established scientists who read Nature was; |+ D8 H: v1 V( C' S: N
supported by facts neglected by Callaway.7 H0 J  l. s' O( I% [
One point the British often forget, but the modern Chinese do not, is that& i* Q+ K. f2 r2 v7 N  M
many in the world wrongly think that the Opium Wars occurred because the
, V1 k: V  E8 l$ S4 y2 R/ `# N6 OChinese sold opium to the British. I had personally experienced this in June8 H8 ~1 s" ?( y* D1 ^
(2012) when a long time friend of mine at MIT thought that way while she
0 B3 L6 u! x  O4 Uand I were in Hong Kong attending a meeting.
# S, h4 y( \  j3 L5 bThe British have a good international image, partly because of your science
$ B) ?( C, H4 i; \' y2 ~and your scientists: when every middle school student has to know Newton and
7 C5 z$ m( s: zDarwin in textbooks, the entire Britain wins the respect of the world.
; x$ m* M; ?" CNature should be proud of the tradition and prestige built by the great (and: r5 `7 W- S9 z
objective) scientists, some of whom have published in Nature to make Nature
; Q# T) }2 S2 Uwhat it is today. Your prestige will be strengthened when you take steps to: `; M2 A, A0 I& n
repair the damage caused by your news reporters.  Z8 x4 _! H9 Z0 y. H* j; r. r
The British have never apologized to us about the Opium Wars and did not- |( \+ S! X1 e: O! I# T6 R1 A0 H
show slight remorse when leaving Hong Kong in 1997 which the British forced
! e5 T+ v* R8 h) G' M/ \2 d# Eus to cede after the British won the Opium Wars. So the memory is rather
8 ^, Q# m5 q! C, p, Dfresh, not just lingering from the 1840s. If Nature refuses to admit that7 ?- H0 @7 Y3 _$ F% I) f
this report was not balanced, it will be difficult to “dispel doubts”
# ], V. R: x2 h7 habout British supremacy.% v' o) l6 W# @: f
The Chinese suffer from a poor image. We also know that we have many
3 b. I" f4 g! U3 @2 I' w, p" O3 a+ _4 \unsolved problems that we are ashamed of, including cheating. More and more: R, o  S$ ]. Y
Chinese are receptive to legitimate and balanced criticism, as evidenced by" @7 B3 X8 U  y. j
our public apology for our faults at the badminton games during the London# Z5 r; S( h' a2 s" ^, I
Olympic. But we are sensitive to ill-founded criticism with apparent biases.! B1 t% A% g& h0 l0 w% Q( y. S
Ye Shiwen is only a 16 year old and should have enjoyed her moment of
6 t; N- O) t/ b: P6 \; Dprofessional achievement. When she is known to have passed multiple tests
( A. K0 ?- o+ e" F4 i: r6 z& [7 {before and during the London Olympic and there is no evidence to accuse her,
7 \7 w$ U/ \0 S5 L% x3 dit is certainly unjustified when the negative opinions were highly
2 {) _8 h8 I1 ?2 \  {( gpublicized but the positive ones were not, especially in a journal like
& ^/ p  {: M- c" p/ n" m; kNature.
. Y# M5 R4 v& n& v3 HI hope that you will set record straight and publish opinions that balance* c  |. L0 B6 ?5 [% K1 ^
the Callaway report.( Y; q; p1 {* J% u$ b) F

0 {1 J' E. ]# v/ hYi
* {8 k3 ?2 d# l4 w7 d9 X) y; ^. k. Y' N$ i- c
Yi Rao, Ph.D.- ?- i* ~* M9 s
Professor of Neurobiology, Peking University School of Life Sciences
2 W- O. e' X" s# l# @Beijing, China
) E$ p1 B( z7 O8 H: a' d
鲜花(430) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2012-8-5 00:23 | 显示全部楼层
好文,这个才是教授,不是叫兽。
鲜花(4) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2012-8-5 04:01 | 显示全部楼层
高水平·········
大型搬家
鲜花(541) 鸡蛋(13)
发表于 2012-8-5 07:18 | 显示全部楼层
老杨团队 追求完美
原文发表在哪里, Nature News?
大型搬家
鲜花(6) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2012-8-5 19:54 | 显示全部楼层
Callaway报道是种族偏见!!!
鲜花(5) 鸡蛋(6)
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-6 20:16 | 显示全部楼层
FrankSoccer 发表于 2012-8-5 08:18 4 ^  f$ Y1 s, G+ n' s
原文发表在哪里, Nature News?

- f% l9 V2 Y. Q- Y0 H+ _6 g$ x原文是公开信。" _# S8 G1 f* G6 T0 i

3 T' c) i- O/ L6 T& c小胜  http://2012.sina.com.cn/cn/aq/2012-08-07/054745942.shtml
鲜花(541) 鸡蛋(13)
发表于 2012-8-6 20:23 | 显示全部楼层
老杨团队,追求完美;客户至上,服务到位!
bigsnail 发表于 2012-8-6 21:16 ' G1 f% P6 q. t8 h
原文是公开信。6 E8 g0 r4 O' a) c5 ~1 o
! ^0 Z. A: @9 O7 w1 e
小胜  http://2012.sina.com.cn/cn/aq/2012-08-07/054745942.shtml
# X: U/ d  ?) n
谢谢。好像那个什么杂志已经道歉了。
鲜花(125) 鸡蛋(1)
发表于 2012-8-7 08:01 | 显示全部楼层
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 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-14 00:55 | 显示全部楼层
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其实比饶毅更牛的回复是 Upenn 的 LAI JIANG
$ @$ r8 b. ^& Y+ d( J: z9 g如果是中国长大的,英语能到这种程度真是很不简单。% {/ N% Z0 r4 q- \& x/ J

- e3 s9 U  w; Y& q: m* qhttp://www.sas.upenn.edu/rappegroup/htdocs/People/LJ.html( A! r- w0 d8 D. i' n+ u$ Q) e
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FROM LAI JIANG, Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania
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It is a shame to see Nature — which nearly all scientists, including myself
0 r4 ~% Y5 [4 I* X" [# G9 `, regard as one of the most prestigious and influential physical-science( r5 t! S% ^/ T) w
magazines — publish a thinly veiled biased article like this. Granted, this4 K9 g# P9 w6 s3 p3 g! T$ X+ B
is not a peer-reviewed scientific article and did not go through the) f: P3 e' i( ~" ~% t
scrutiny of picking referees. But to serve as a channel for the general$ b- z* D( p! g# Z! A
populace to be in touch with and appreciate science, the authors and editors
8 @) S9 z( X4 \5 @6 ^7 r3 Ishould at least present the readers with facts within the proper context,/ J$ {& J& N- l( n6 H
which they blatantly failed to do.* `0 ?$ G3 R! l

9 J* t7 p, U& I1 @First, to identify Ye’s performance increase, Ewen Callaway compared her  V6 C4 S8 [6 W
Olympic 400-metre IM time with her performance at the World Championships in
. }4 `. o) `+ f8 G3 `7 `, k2011 (4:28.43 and 4:35.15, respectively) and concluded that she had an “# @2 k4 w8 r4 d: {# M5 j* v' T
anomalous” improvement of around 7 seconds (6.72 s). In fact, her previous) l) c1 S1 ]1 V( a
personal best was 4:33.79 at the Asian Games in 2010. This leads to an
, c' F  d; Y" Q' }6 iimprovement of 5.38 seconds. In a sporting event in which 0.1 s can be the
5 Y; F" z# |" T. C4 w) g+ C# j: B7 @4 Odifference between the gold and silver medal, I see no reason for 5.38 s to
- D" N  O. ]7 v) {7 Mbe treated as 7 s.
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# C0 `# t" T/ [Second, as previously pointed out, Ye is only 16 years old and her body is
! n' {' O! I+ H! x9 wstill developing. Bettering oneself by 5 seconds over two years may seem
. i/ d' \' s3 z& n, `impossible for an adult swimmer, but it certainly happens among youngsters." U9 o( A# y! ?
An interview with Australian gold medallist Ian Thorpe revealed that his 400
! t  Y# r  R6 z-metre freestyle time improved by 5 seconds between the ages of 15 and 16.
% P- s/ A- T. T; _- h( XFor regular people, including Callaway, it may be hard to imagine what an
* p0 j3 V- P7 J* `3 `) }4 Celite swimmer can achieve as he or she matures and undergoes scientific and
7 S4 w- m2 F" s& }) Y2 w9 @persistent training. But jumping to the conclusion that it is “anomalous”
" V" H% ?) Z1 F/ j7 k, X  u+ sbased on ‘Oh that’s so tough I cannot imagine it is real’ is hardly sound.
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Third, to compare Ryan Lochte’s last 50 metres to Ye’s is a textbook9 s5 D, l; Q- D+ X5 U8 x$ z* s
example of ‘cherry-picking’ your data. Yes, Lochte was slower than Ye in9 M& V/ P  y1 k' Y
the last 50 metres, but Lochte had a huge lead in the first 300 metres, so
1 r4 d8 c7 \: c( Che chose not to push himself too hard and to conserve his energy for later7 d6 R. [/ T2 u6 i: p  v% ~
events (whether this conforms to the Olympic spirit and the ‘use one’s- S9 f+ a) X/ j7 L" D; U% z
best efforts to win a match’ requirement that the Badminton World6 z# _/ a% h' [8 }% e
Federation recently invoked to disqualify four badminton pairs is another) W! Y2 [) d. c8 w( P
topic worth discussing, though probably not in Nature). Ye, on the other$ E& c- m) a1 M) m1 ^# [
hand, was trailing behind after the first 300 metres and relied on freestyle
' Y' z" ?: l: w  r8 ~/ i$ Y3 ?6 e, S, in which she has an edge, to win the race. Failing to mention this
6 V9 i! V0 c7 R7 [$ N9 Ystrategic difference, as well as the fact that Lochte is 23.25 seconds3 e9 n# m; o& M- V
faster (4:05.18) than Ye overall, creates the illusion that a woman swam
5 F9 y% v1 {$ k. q. `faster than the best man in the same sport, which sounds impossible. Putting
9 g( R2 ~4 ?* x& [/ H6 Vaside the gender argument, I believe this is still a leading question that: P* H# l& D# u; F: `
implies to the reader that there is something fishy going on.
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Fourth is another example of cherry-picking. In the same event, there are3 c* C1 z+ u6 O0 v. h
four male swimmers who swam faster than both Lochter (29.10 s) and Ye (28.93
. ]7 @) Y5 @2 \2 p, Q9 xs) in the final 50 metres: Kosuke Hagino (28.52 s), Michael Phelps (28.44 s  N$ Q; S3 r4 m% Z
), Yuya Horihata (27.87 s) and Thomas Fraser-Holmes (28.35 s). As it turns
3 A& Y: w. M8 q. [' {4 ]1 o; ?& @out, if we are just talking about the last 50 metres in a 400-metre IM,  v3 _1 b. ^1 H- S" t
Lochter is not the example I would have used if I were the author. What kind$ n- z2 B* h& b% z: j: k  _* Y5 v0 G
of scientific rigorousness is Callaway trying to demonstrate here? Is it
1 c2 j6 S0 ]# z( Tlogical that if Lochter is the champion, we should assume that he leads in
7 }2 ]4 z8 a, {7 ?2 M3 f! Xevery split? That would be a terrible way to teach the public how science
' A+ M% U( ]8 \/ T* Xworks.2 W% U# Y: I8 }3 D" Z9 _

4 l/ U( ^% Q  n1 n8 K* g3 EFifth is the issue I oppose the most. Callaway quotes Ross Tucker and3 ~6 ~/ F, M' R) T' T: y$ Z
implies that a drug test cannot rule out the possibility of doping. Is this
4 f7 _, j5 j+ H: Q8 D$ i3 K" ]kind of agnosticism what Nature really wants to teach its readers? By that( ~1 k+ R2 _4 `$ N6 `/ E/ p
standard, I estimate that at least half of the peer-reviewed scientific
0 ^% [3 |4 f3 p& z- d9 ~( Apapers in Nature should be retracted. How can one convince the editors and; \; {: j7 a. N5 ?. E: m
reviewers that their proposed theory works for every possible case? One
; W$ f+ ?0 }" _' b+ lcannot. One chooses to apply the theory to typical examples and to
5 Y2 |+ `4 D! q$ H6 U3 D# kdemonstrate that in (hopefully) all scenarios considered, the theory works
* h& I% l$ i0 s) F) d4 A4 L* Bto a degree, and that that should warrant publication until a counterexample+ g7 y6 g' Y. f  B0 R
is found. I could imagine that Callaway has a sceptical mind, which is# V' Z  T$ z" F
crucial to scientific thinking, but that would be put to better use if he
; w5 `' o4 b8 T; I( E, g9 Jwrote a peer-reviewed paper that discussed the odds of Ye doping on a highly
2 v/ g  i7 a7 x9 g3 K* y" aadvanced, non-detectable drug that the Chinese have come up with in the& }) S( m2 \3 G7 d: e
past 4 years (they obviously did not have it in Beijing, otherwise why not! E) \: x) V0 f( `  g- y
use it and woo the audience at home?), based on data and rational derivation. J$ s, J  f# z9 c
. This article, however, can be interpreted as saying that all athletes are
3 Y- R5 ?' {9 [. c; ?$ B  ldoping and the authorities are just not good enough to catch them. That may
- v  n. o' Z5 H: d" g9 M+ h, bbe true, logically, but definitely will not make the case if there is ever a) ~8 j2 G- u& F) r/ W6 J+ `
hearing by the governing body for water sports, FINA, to determine if Ye% J( r, `6 `. B( w# b5 c
has doped. To ask whether it is possible to obtain a false negative in a  a" j3 M7 m( }
drug test looks like a rigged question to me. Of course it is possible:; L8 Q9 ~" B# E6 z
other than the athlete taking a drug that the test is not designed to detect) _+ S7 Q) O* W" m
, anyone who has taken quantum 101 will tell you that everything is
. d2 V' w, P) [. m) `probabilistic in nature, and so there is a probability that the drug in an
4 l; G, I- ^( e* A0 L. u* m2 ~athlete’s system could tunnel out right at the moment of the test. A slight
" H" n0 L, g$ tchance it may be, but should we disregard all test results because of it?; z: X. Y/ P* V$ W# Y
Let’s be practical and reasonable, and accept that the World Anti-Doping# M6 `) b8 P4 A/ z, a" y% e9 U
agency (WADA) is competent at its job. Ye’s urine sample will be stored for
" X- l8 e, w$ H( g1 U# @0 ]eight years after the contest for future testing as technology advances.% M6 m( C: m8 D
Innocent until proven guilty, shouldn’t it be?
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Sixth, and the last point I would like to make, is that the out-of-
4 F3 X6 `4 @: n1 G( z- f+ N3 k  Qcompetition drug test is already in effect, which Callaway failed to mention* j7 k+ A! H8 o$ q" ~' O2 y% t5 G1 P
. As noted in the president of WADA’s press release, drug testing for: v0 S- F: z" e- g$ ]
Olympians began at least six months before the opening of the London
: G% f) d% i( ?+ aOlympics. Furthermore, 107 athletes have been banned from this Olympics for2 ?  Q+ ?# p' W8 y' X. x
doping. That may be the reason that “everyone will pass at the Olympic
# f/ Y7 ?% M! o1 J! w* y6 n0 Lgames. Hardly anyone fails in competition testing” —  those who did dope
! S2 F: i3 g4 k0 y& xhave already been caught and sanctioned. Callaway is free to suggest that a
8 N: A0 l2 i* O$ jplayer could have doped beforehand and fooled the test at the game, but this
/ O* P7 M! X1 W( P5 spossibility is certainly ruled out for Ye.
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$ Y4 `! e: R3 v, kOver all, even though Callaway did not falsify any data, he did (
$ J$ }" x1 c, g, |9 I* dintentionally or not) cherry-pick data that, in my view, are far too
) p8 l  v/ F& c2 K0 w# T& J- x2 ]suggestive to be fair and unbiased. If you want to cover a story of a
5 N7 ^5 S' i- f$ U5 f0 Ysuspected doping from a scientific point of view, be impartial and provide* j( [6 ~' ~7 {
all the facts for the reader to judge. You are entitled to your7 {7 f6 Z: ?( ^' p! o
interpretation of the facts, and the expression thereof in your piece,6 w- j2 y3 K) W4 [3 {/ ?
explicitly or otherwise, but showing only evidence that favours your
) L" {( k9 \/ m) o2 |9 n) Zargument is hardly good science or journalism. Such an article in a journal5 `# ?& p8 _* W+ L3 m
such as Nature is not an appropriate example of how scientific research or0 a4 u2 u9 c; q# W
reporting should be done.
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