That’s up to 5% of reported cases. How many false accusations actually make it to a formal complaint, rather than simply circulating the rumor mill? If your intent is character assassination, you wouldn’t expose your accusations to scrutiny by bringing it to court.
Also, 1 in 20 is a huge number when you consider how many reported cases there are. That is by no means “rare.” Quite common, actually.
Cypher@aussie.zone 1 day ago
So if we only have a yes/no response available for the question “do women lie about domestic violence?” the answer is… yes.
We haven’t seen what the study actually asked or the options they allowed for in the response.
The article is worthless without being able to review the actual study.
wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz 16 hours ago
If there was a modicum of honesty in the study design, it would have five or so options:
So you can see how misleading a simple “yes/no” can be, and that really puts into perspective why people are taking issue with the murky methodology, and what those who take the bait are really falling for.
Of course, even with more robust multiple choice, there are still many pitfalls, such as:
And probably more that I haven’t thought of. So there are a lot of variables, and if they only included the one leading question then it’s just ragebait really shouldn’t pass peer review (unless all the reviewers are afraid to critique it!) And the journalists reporting it (coincidentally the authors of the study) are being quite dishonest either way.