Article 4SPMJ Dodgy sex-psychology paper finally gets retracted

Dodgy sex-psychology paper finally gets retracted

by
Cathleen O'Grady
from Ars Technica - All content on (#4SPMJ)
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Enlarge / Floppy data leads to abandoned high-heels research. (credit: Jason Parks / Flickr)

Two years ago, Ars published a story about some famous psychology research that smelled... off. Psychologist Nicolas Gui(C)guen's flashy findings on human sexuality appeared to be riddled with errors and inconsistencies, and two researchers had raised an alarm.

Now, four years after James Heathers and Nick Brown first started digging into Gui(C)guen's work, one of his papers has been retracted. The study reported that men were more helpful to women wearing high heels compared to mid heels or flats. "As a man I can see that I prefer to see my wife when she wears high heels, and many men in France have the same evaluation," Gui(C)guen told Time in its coverage of the paper.

Slow progress

Since Brown and Heathers went public with their critiques of Gui(C)guen's work, there has been little progress. In September 2018, a meeting between Gui(C)guen and university authorities concluded with an agreement that he would request retractions of two of his articles. One of those papers is the recently retracted high-heels study; the other was a study reporting that men prefer to pick up female hitchhikers who were wearing red compared to other colors. The latter has not yet been retracted.

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