This is obnoxious. You cannot disprove a scientific study by pointing at who funded it, and a properly constructed one won't be able to hide bad results since it'd be preregistered.
He doesn't have the burden of disproving it, the study has the burden of proving its claims. I consider studies funded by an interested party as weak evidence at best - perhaps enough to encourage an independent party to conduct another study.
Proving or disproving a claim is the purpose of a study. At this point, it's out of the researchers hands and up to other research teams to replicate the research and confirm or deny the results.
All medicines in the US are approved using studies funded by the company that submitted them. There's a simple reason for that - nobody else would care enough to do it.
If you can't read a study well enough to tell if the methods it uses are good, that's your problem.
It's not an effective heuristic. Overly online cynical people are just obsessed with the idea that everything is a conspiracy that can be undone by "following the money".
Bad science reporting is common, but it's more common for the reporters to just misread what a study says.
- "In 2018, Buckley and the other nine senior members of the editorial board resigned, claiming that MDPI "pressured them to accept manuscripts of mediocre quality and importance."
Even before reading this I definitely got vibes of "Wine makers find drinking red wine has benefits" or "Starbucks finds that coffee is the ultimate health drink" etc.
"1-2 glasses of wine a few days a week associated with better health outcomes" was true, but it leaves out "1-2 glasses of wine a few days a week associated with wealth". There's some correlations there, but neither statement is pointing the finger at the causation.
Also teetotalers, as a group, includes people who don't drink because an undiagnosed underlying health issue makes them feel ill when they imbibe. Maybe a latent hepatitis-b infection.
The article mentions that it's "usually white horseradish, dyed green", and that the real thing "can cost more per pound than even the choice tuna it sits on."
Would be interesting to verifiably taste real wasabi. Who knows, maybe I've never actually even tasted the real thing?
I’ve found real wasabi to actually be a bit milder than some of the horseradish imitators. I suppose I always assumed it’d be even stronger, but that hasn’t been the case in my experience.
If you don't see the sushi chef grinding a little green root fresh on a wasabi grinder and adding a little bit to your rice, it's safe to assume it's not Japanese wasabi.
If you have a Japanese food market near you they might have it. Some specialty grocers can carry it too. If you happen to be in the bay area iirc there's a Wasabi farm in half moon bay.
They give you a root, and a grater. Tastes milder than what we get, here.
I have heard that it is impossible to domesticate (has to be harvested wild, on certain mountains). However, I watched a program, where a guy in Hawai'i said he'd figured out how to domesticate it.
It's a difficult plant to grow as it requires specific conditions. Though there are farms in the pacific northwest that have been able to cultivate it successfully.
Here is a decent paper that discusses the challenges[PDF]:
It's still very hard to grow with high failure rates, but you can definitely find plants for affordable prices -- a bit less than 10$, but then you need to manage to keep it alive for 3 years if you want to enjoy it propagate it.
There are a number of good YT videos on how to cultivate it, and some documentaries on professional plantations.
To have it the spiciest you should wait a good ten minutes or more, the spiciness is activated by the process:
"The chemical in wasabi that provides for its initial pungency is the volatile compound allyl isothiocyanate, which is produced by hydrolysis of allyl glucosinolate [...]; the hydrolysis reaction is catalyzed by myrosinase and occurs when the enzyme is released on cell rupture caused by grating" (adapted from wikipedia)
It is difficult to grow but there are multiple producers in the US, and I've occasionally seen it for sale in grocery stores. Some sushi places use it. It is more expensive than the green horseradish/mustard powder, but not prohibitively so.
You can taste the difference but in most contexts it is pretty substitutable with the fake wasabi, hence the ubiquity of the latter.
I'm curious as to why its not possible to grow locally given the growing number of startups growing food in cities in fully controlled environments? for ex: https://youtu.be/VxRNoSSkLkE?t=191
Left unexamined is: what other substances are linked to boosts in memory?
You'd assume that, of the 1000's of substances we eat, by randomness about half have a positive or no effect, and the other half have a negative effect. How about ketchup? Jalapeños? Oyster sauce? Curry powder? Probably some foods have an even larger positive effect.
Eating would probably cause a lot of bias thus destroying the randomness. Starting with our taste buds which causes avoidance, the digestion system that will break things down so many substances will end up similar despite their differences before hand, and the blood brain barrier which many things can't get past. Then there is dosage, substances can have wildly different effects or none at all depending on how much you give and how long they are given.
Dosage would probably be among the bigger issues, if oyster sauce contained a substance that got past those barriers just how much would you have to imbibe to get a positive or negative effect, and would the other ingredients at that level start causing side effects, interference, or otherwise mask the substance.
They weren't serving it with food. It was a capsule by itself, at bedtime.
don't fixate on oyster sauce; I just picked something at random. However, the larger point remains: this "study" is garbage. There are probably people who'll start buying "wasabi" and feel all healthy & virtuous, so there's your placebo effect right there.
If the effects is true, I don’t think it is necessarily due to any particular substance in the wasabi. If the simple smelling of pleasant fragrances can boost the memory performance by 260% [1], I believe other pungent substances can have a similar effect, too! :D
petesoper | 2 years ago
cxcorp | 2 years ago
I'm sure.
astrange | 2 years ago
glimshe | 2 years ago
ethanbond | 2 years ago
Is that an option that’s on the table? Or do we have to take the information we’re able to get and just interpret it critically?
astrange | 2 years ago
DeIlliad | 2 years ago
astrange | 2 years ago
If you can't read a study well enough to tell if the methods it uses are good, that's your problem.
thsksbd | 2 years ago
But its also not obnoxious not to be helplessly naive that you don't scrutinize sources using effective heuristics.
astrange | 2 years ago
Bad science reporting is common, but it's more common for the reporters to just misread what a study says.
Besides, this is nutrition science, where what's actually happening is scientists are conspiring against big ice cream by refusing to tell you that it's good for you. (https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/05/ice-cre...)
perihelions | 2 years ago
- "In 2018, Buckley and the other nine senior members of the editorial board resigned, claiming that MDPI "pressured them to accept manuscripts of mediocre quality and importance."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutrients_(journal)
https://www.science.org/content/article/open-access-editors-...
(This is the journal that accepted the OP study).
TapWaterBandit | 2 years ago
connicpu | 2 years ago
thsksbd | 2 years ago
wnevets | 2 years ago
keyle | 2 years ago
7e | 2 years ago
eikenberry | 2 years ago
MPSimmons | 2 years ago
willk | 2 years ago
cxcorp | 2 years ago
Would be interesting to verifiably taste real wasabi. Who knows, maybe I've never actually even tasted the real thing?
appplication | 2 years ago
dfxm12 | 2 years ago
tayo42 | 2 years ago
ChrisMarshallNY | 2 years ago
They give you a root, and a grater. Tastes milder than what we get, here.
I have heard that it is impossible to domesticate (has to be harvested wild, on certain mountains). However, I watched a program, where a guy in Hawai'i said he'd figured out how to domesticate it.
Haven't heard much about that, though.
HybridCurve | 2 years ago
Here is a decent paper that discusses the challenges[PDF]:
https://www.skagitmg.org/wp-content/uploads/Public-Pages/Foo...
ceejayoz | 2 years ago
Jazgot | 2 years ago
Sebguer | 2 years ago
woolion | 2 years ago
To have it the spiciest you should wait a good ten minutes or more, the spiciness is activated by the process: "The chemical in wasabi that provides for its initial pungency is the volatile compound allyl isothiocyanate, which is produced by hydrolysis of allyl glucosinolate [...]; the hydrolysis reaction is catalyzed by myrosinase and occurs when the enzyme is released on cell rupture caused by grating" (adapted from wikipedia)
jandrewrogers | 2 years ago
You can taste the difference but in most contexts it is pretty substitutable with the fake wasabi, hence the ubiquity of the latter.
kawera | 2 years ago
pyaamb | 2 years ago
lotophage | 2 years ago
haffi112 | 2 years ago
petesoper | 2 years ago
petesoper | 2 years ago
glandium | 2 years ago
kadoban | 2 years ago
jandrewrogers | 2 years ago
smegsicle | 2 years ago
neom | 2 years ago
AlbertCory | 2 years ago
You'd assume that, of the 1000's of substances we eat, by randomness about half have a positive or no effect, and the other half have a negative effect. How about ketchup? Jalapeños? Oyster sauce? Curry powder? Probably some foods have an even larger positive effect.
I'd imagine no one's tested those.
molticrystal | 2 years ago
Dosage would probably be among the bigger issues, if oyster sauce contained a substance that got past those barriers just how much would you have to imbibe to get a positive or negative effect, and would the other ingredients at that level start causing side effects, interference, or otherwise mask the substance.
AlbertCory | 2 years ago
don't fixate on oyster sauce; I just picked something at random. However, the larger point remains: this "study" is garbage. There are probably people who'll start buying "wasabi" and feel all healthy & virtuous, so there's your placebo effect right there.
sinuhe69 | 2 years ago
[1] https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/how-simple-fragr...
purplezooey | 2 years ago
PrimeMcFly | 2 years ago
fakedang | 2 years ago