Skeptoid #188: Student Questions: String Theory, the Asian Flush, and the Peltzman Effect
Skeptoid answers some questions sent in by students around the world. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
Skeptoid answers some questions sent in by students around the world. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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String Theory and Asian Flush
00:04:08
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| Once again this week we're opening up the internet's premiere podcast about the truth behind urban legends to students so we can find out what they're hearing and are curious to know the facts about. | |
| We'll give each of these the full skeptoid treatment. | |
| And remember, if you're a student you can send in a question too. | |
| Just listen to the end to find out how. | |
| Student questions are coming right up on Skeptoid. | |
| Hi, I'm Alex Goldman. | |
| You may know me as the host of Reply All, but I'm done with that. | |
| I'm doing something else now. | |
| I've started a new podcast called Hyperfixed. | |
| On every episode of HyperFixed, listeners write in with their problems and I try to solve them. | |
| Some massive and life-altering and some so minuscule it'll boggle your mind. | |
| No matter the problem, no matter the size, I'm here for you. | |
| That's HyperFixed, the new podcast from Radiotopia. | |
| Find it wherever you listen to podcasts or at hyperfixedpod.com. | |
| You're listening to Skeptoid. | |
| I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. | |
| Student questions, string theory, the Asian flush, and the Peltzman effect. | |
| Some very interesting student questions this week. | |
| We're going to talk about what the heck string theory is and why it's important, if it is. | |
| A problem affecting nearly half of Asian people when they drink alcohol called the Asian flush reaction. | |
| Economics applied to traffic in the form of the Peltzmann effect. | |
| The alleged health benefits of full-spectrum lighting. | |
| And finally, we're going to take a critical look at the age-old belief that some people with bum joints can predict weather changes. | |
| Do external variances in temperature, humidity, or pressure actually affect what goes on inside your knee joint? | |
| Let's begin with string theory. | |
| Hi, my name is Jacob Schneider, and I'm a student at the University of Michigan. | |
| I was wondering what your thoughts are on the different quantum theories of gravity that exist today. | |
| Mainly, I'm curious of your thoughts on the validity of string theory as an actual science. | |
| A quantum theory of gravity is, in oversimplified terms, an attempt to develop a complete theory that describes how gravity works in the world of quantum physics, much like we already have for the other three fundamental forces. | |
| Having such a theory is important because it would probably help get us to a unified theory, which would explain all the forces in nature. | |
| String theory, which is a blanket term describing about a half dozen or so different formulations of string theories, is one candidate for a quantum theory of gravity. | |
| String theory itself seeks to explain interactions with a mathematical model based on vibrating strings, points, or membranes. | |
| Quantum theories of gravity are an open area of research. | |
| Many people are working on many different models, and although string theory has been among the most successful, none of these models are anywhere near complete, proven, or tested. | |
| However, even in this nascent state, they certainly are legitimate scientific fields and are important research. | |
| String theory has, however, drawn criticism for being unscientific, stemming from the requirement that valid scientific theories make testable predictions. | |
| String theories are theoretically testable, but not realistically testable. | |
| The energy levels at which the equations work are many orders of magnitude above the energy levels we can create in our largest particle beam colliders, and in fact, far above those of any theoretically possible collider. | |
| Thus, if the predictions made by string theory can never be tested, it's of no value as a theory. | |
| So while some physicists still maintain that the work is important, an increasing number are turning away from it. | |
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Alcohol, Flushing, and Cancer Risks
00:02:41
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| Some feel it's on its way out. | |
| To learn more about the theory itself, check out Discover Magazine's contest where people had two minutes to describe it. | |
| Hi, Brian. | |
| This is Matt Urian from the University of Nebraska, Omaha. | |
| I was just wondering if the Asian flush is actually worth worrying about, also known as alcohol flush reaction. | |
| Alcohol-induced facial flushing is a condition in some people, including up to half of Asians by some accounts, where they can't tolerate alcoholic beverages. | |
| They may easily become nauseated, dizzy, or drowsy, but the predominant symptom is a reddening of the face, sometimes accompanied by swelling and sometimes covering the whole body. | |
| The condition appears to be correlated to a deficiency of the enzyme ALDH2, which is responsible for the breakdown of acetaldehyde. | |
| When it can't be broken down, it accumulates and causes the symptoms. | |
| The responsible gene has been tentatively traced all the way back to a single tribe in southern China. | |
| Most of the research on this question comes out of Japan, as they're among the population most affected. | |
| Many sources say that people with alcohol-induced facial flushing are more likely to get cancer if they drink alcohol. | |
| This conclusion appears to be well supported from the available data. | |
| One study found an association among men who both drink and smoke heavily were slightly more likely to get esophageal cancer if they also have the flushing response. | |
| Another study concluded that ALDH2 deficiency was an important screening factor in early detection of esophageal cancer. | |
| But other cancers do not seem to have the correlation. | |
| A study among women with breast cancer found a slightly increased risk among women who drink alcohol, but whether or not these women experienced a facial flushing when they drink made no difference. | |
| People so afflicted typically don't enjoy drinking, and so one silver lining is a decreased prevalence of alcoholism. | |
| When you drink less, you're less likely to get any disease that's caused by alcohol consumption, like some digestive tract cancers, including esophageal cancer. | |
| So the conclusion that appears to be best supported by existing research is that people who experience alcohol-induced facial flushing are less likely to get some cancers, but only because they probably drink less. | |
| As long as you don't drink heavily, the condition by itself does not appear to carry any special risks other than the unpleasant symptoms. | |
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The Real Peltzman Effect
00:09:29
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| Hi, Brian. | |
| I'm Borja Robert from Universidad Complutención of Madrid, Spain. | |
| I'd love to listen to your thoughts about the Petzelman effect in driving and car accidents. | |
| The Peltzmann effect was nicely summed up in an episode of the TV show CSI. | |
| The safer they make the cars, the more risks the driver is willing to take. | |
| It's named after the regulatory economist Sam Peltzman who first described the effect. | |
| It doesn't just apply to driving cars, but to all systems where regulations are put into place designed to improve safety or avert trouble. | |
| You're more likely to do crazy things on a tightrope if there's a safety net. | |
| You're more likely to make risky stock market investments if you have a nest egg that's invested securely. | |
| Many people drive safely regardless of the laws. | |
| Most of us would probably wear seatbelts even if it wasn't the law, but do we drive crazier because we have the comfort of knowing the airbag is there? | |
| There are always a wilder segment of the population for whom this is indeed the case. | |
| When this happens, the overall safety of the system for everyone is actually decreased. | |
| When you make it safer to take risks, more people will take them. | |
| And then we have to weigh the higher number of accidents against the protection afforded by the safety devices. | |
| The Peltzmann effect is real and together with its corollaries, is quite interesting. | |
| Hey everyone, I want to remind you about a truly unique and once-in-a-lifetime adventure. | |
| Join me and Mediterranean archaeologist Dr. Flint Dibble for a skeptoid sailing adventure through the Mediterranean Sea aboard the SV Royal Clipper, the world's largest full-rigged sailing ship. | |
| This is also the only opportunity you'll have to hear Flint and I talk about our experiences when we both went on Joe Rogan to represent the causes of science and reality against whatever it is that you get when you're thrown into that lion pit. | |
| We set sail from Málaga, Spain on April 18th, 2026 and finish the adventure in Nice, France on April 25th. | |
| You'll enjoy a fascinating skeptical mini-conference at sea. | |
| You'll visit amazing ports along the Spanish and French coasts and Flint will be our exclusive onboard expert sharing the real archaeology and history about every stop. | |
| We've got special side quests and extra skeptical content planned at each port. | |
| This is a true sailing ship. | |
| You can climb the rat lines to the crow's nest, handle the sails. | |
| You can even take the helm and steer. | |
| This is a real bucket list adventure you don't want to miss. | |
| But cabins are selling fast and this ship does always sell out. | |
| Act now or you'll miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. | |
| Get the full details and book your cabin at skeptoid.com slash adventures. | |
| Hope to see you on board. | |
| That's skeptoid.com/slash adventures. | |
| Hello, Brian. | |
| I'm Ivan from the University of Applied Life Sciences in Vienna and I'm wondering whether daylight lamps have any health benefit at all. | |
| Daylight lamps, also known as full-spectrum lamps, are ultraviolet lights intended to mimic the spectrum of natural daylight. | |
| Some claim that using these lights indoors confers all sorts of health benefits, mainly vitamin D production, but also including better calcium absorption, lower tooth decay, fewer colds, more energy, improved physical strength, reduced eye fatigue, and headaches. | |
| No credible research exists that supports any of these claimed benefits. | |
| However, the vitamin D question has indeed been studied and the results are clear. | |
| Although vitamin D production can be somewhat stimulated by artificial lighting on people otherwise deprived of light, the intensity is the only determining factor. | |
| Extremely bright lights are required. | |
| The color of the light, and whether it's a daylight lamp or not, makes no difference. | |
| The reason is probably that terms such as daylight lamps and full spectrum lighting are marketing terms only. | |
| They do not in any way mean that the product does indeed mimic sunlight. | |
| That's virtually impossible for a fluorescent tube. | |
| All it means is that the manufacturer markets its color as having been matched closer to that of daylight by the application of different phosphors to the inside surface of the tube. | |
| But there are no standards or requirements they must follow when using these terms. | |
| This is not to be confused with the actual use of ultraviolet light therapy to treat conditions such as seasonal affective disorder, as discussed in Skeptoid number 136, or the use of red light to help restore sleep patterns in people deprived of day-night cycles. | |
| Hi, Brian. | |
| My name is Tim Thielen, and I'm a student at the Chile Shemecada Community College in Salem, Oregon. | |
| As the temperature keeps dropping here, I keep hearing people complaining about their arthritis flaring up. | |
| My question is, does temperature really play a role on arthritis or is that just something that people believe because they've heard that all their life? | |
| Thank you. | |
| At the risk of having everyone with joint pain come after me with pitchforks and torches, the correct answer is B. Atmospheric conditions, including temperature, pressure, and humidity, do not affect the temperature, pressure, or humidity inside the human body. | |
| Thus, there is no plausible way that the weather could impact joint pain. | |
| Like taking vitamin C to cure a cold, this is another medical myth that's so deeply ingrained that it's really hard to shake. | |
| For most of my life, I believed my bum knee could predict weather changes. | |
| I thought it worked like a barometer. | |
| I was unaware that simply riding in an elevator produces much greater shifts in atmospheric pressure than common weather fronts. | |
| And so I fell victim to confirmation bias. | |
| You see, the weather is almost always changing one way or another. | |
| And whenever my knee happened to hurt, I'd take notice if the weather was indeed changing. | |
| If it didn't, I probably just attributed the knee pain to the bum knee. | |
| Confirmation bias causes us to assign undue significance to events that confirm our belief and causes us to rationalize away any events that don't. | |
| Changes in humidity are even less plausible. | |
| Human bodies have very specific hydration levels. | |
| Walking through a sprinkler dramatically shifts the relative humidity outside your body, but does not affect your body's internal hydration. | |
| Neither does a humid or a dry day. | |
| The synovial fluid inside your joint is the same whether you're in the desert or the bathtub. | |
| If you became dehydrated enough for the synovial fluid to be affected, you'd experience many other, more severe symptoms of dehydration first. | |
| Ice packs and heat packs can, however, be used to alleviate joint pain. | |
| The difference is that these, when applied directly for a period of time, will change your deep tissues temperature at the point of application. | |
| However, weather only affects your skin, so as long as you're properly clothed and don't experience hypothermia or hyperthermia, your body temperature remains unaffected. | |
| I'm always on the lookout for more student questions, so if you can record your voice on your computer or your cell phone or anything, send me your questions for a future episode. | |
| Just come to skeptoid.com and click on student questions. | |
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