-
-
En réponse à @DrRobThompson @_robthompson
I would say that's a misleading study based on the study - the brains they tested were donated by people who thought they had
1 réponse 0 Retweet 2 j'aime -
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft @_robthompson
CTE, so there's definitely self selection going on there. That being said, they have ~1400 brains they didn't test, and even
1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft @_robthompson
if all those test negative, that's still a 9% rate of CTE in football players, which is twice the general populace.
1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft @_robthompson
It's definitely an issue, and a problem, but they should be accurate about it.
1 réponse 0 Retweet 2 j'aime -
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
The title alone is misleading, so I'm not surprised the study itself can't speak for all NFL players.
1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @DrRobThompson @ChrisWarcraft
Phrased another way, considering the points you raised, I'm not surprised the study is flawed.
1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @DrRobThompson @_robthompson
Well, the study itself isn't flawed. Football players show an abnormally higher rate of CTE. People are interpreting it wrong.
2 réponses 0 Retweet 2 j'aime -
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
Though would it help if a study examined athletes from multiple sports?
1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime
That would be useful in establishing if sports in general, not just one specific one, caused higher rates of CTE.
-
-
En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
I could see the NHL saying to players "we have lower CTE levels than the NFL, happy?!"
0 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aimeMerci. Twitter en tiendra compte pour améliorer votre fil. SupprimerSupprimer
-
Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
Twitter est peut-être en surcapacité ou rencontre momentanément un incident. Réessayez ou rendez-vous sur la page Twitter Status pour plus d'informations.