500 phrases from scientific publications that are correlated with bullshit

Matthew Hankins catalogs 500 phrases used in scientific articles that researchers use to figleaf the fact that their results aren't statistically significant, and to hand-wave-away the fact that they're publishing anyway.

"As well as being statistically flawed (results are either significant or not and can't be qualified), the wording is linguistically interesting, often describing an aspect of the result that just doesn't exist. For example, "a trend towards significance" expresses non-significance as some sort of motion towards significance, which it isn't: there is no 'trend', in any direction, and nowhere for the trend to be 'towards'."

(barely) not statistically significant (p=0.052)
a barely detectable statistically significant difference (p=0.073)
a borderline significant trend (p=0.09)
a certain trend toward significance (p=0.08)
a clear tendency to significance (p=0.052)
a clear trend (p<0.09)
a clear, strong trend (p=0.09)
a considerable trend toward significance (p=0.069)
a decreasing trend (p=0.09)
a definite trend (p=0.08)
a distinct trend toward significance (p=0.07)
a favorable trend (p=0.09)
a favourable statistical trend (p=0.09)
a little significant (p<0.1)
a margin at the edge of significance (p=0.0608)
a marginal trend (p=0.09)
a marginal trend toward significance (p=0.052)
a marked trend (p=0.07)
a mild trend (p<0.09)
a moderate trend toward significance (p=0.068)
a near-significant trend (p=0.07)
a negative trend (p=0.09)
a nonsignificant trend (p<0.1)

Still Not Significant
[Matthew Hankins]


(via Nature)


(Image: Archbishop , CC-BY-SA)