One
of the things you learn right away in a class on experimental design,
is not too include too many variables. If you want to test the effects
of a certain treatment, better to test on organisms as similar as
possible so you can be sure you’re measuring the effects of your
treatment, rather than something else.
Apple
trees may respond differently than orange trees to a certain
fertilizer, because they are reacting to soil conditions, temperature,
and insects as well as the fertilizer. Maybe one tree just grows more
slowly than the other. So, when you want to discuss how much the trees
are affected by fertilizer application, you also have to acknowledge all
these other differences. Your experiment doesn’t tell you much, except
that apple trees are different than oranges trees and we already knew
that...didn’t we? Best to pick one type of tree in the same field with
similar light and water and soil conditions and then look at fertilizer
effects (and it could be compost, so don’t worry about this being an
inorganic example).
Judging
by revelations of the last week, including Yoga Dawg’s link of
“average” yoga teachers’ salaries (and the vastly superior correction),
and It’s All Yoga Baby’s discussions (here, and here) of the NYT article about yoga
injuries (apparently, hour-long inversions are bad for your neck!), the
notion of difference and variability is often forgotten when the topic
is yoga. I’m not sure you can average anything or use blanket
statements for yoga, but that doesn’t seem to stop the critics.
Skeletons
are hooked up differently, joints have different amounts of mobility,
digestive systems process fats differently, teachers have different
hourly schedules, Iyengar is different that Bikram. Surprise! If you
want to measure anything, discuss anything for comparison, how about
controlling for a few of those variables, so your conclusion actually
has meaning.
Of
course if you do yoga consciously and participate in the yoga
community, you know most of this stuff is pretty silly anyway.
Generalizations make better press, and clarifying details make
headlines and search terms so complicated and boring. It wouldn’t be
half as compelling to discuss how a well-trained, carefully-taught class
can be so beneficial (or not, studies seem to show that you have to
believe yoga will help you, for it to actually help you). Or to show a
break-down of teacher salaries based on region, or place of employment,
or class size. Can’t sell as much advertisement.
So
that’s my take. Yeah, people sometimes get hurt doing yoga. Sometimes
they don’t. What’s really interesting is why...and if you’re
comparing apples and oranges your answer is going to be a lot broader
and have a lot less meaning than a look at what’s going on between those
two Pink Ladies. Narrow the focus, people!
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3 comments:
Great post, real interesting insight, thanks!
An interesting idea put forth, sometime in influence people forget this. A nice reminder :)
Really good source of energy......
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