No, the aim was to find out whether anybody among my Twitter followers would answer, because I wanted to follow up. That was really it!
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Replying to @mankinholes
We both agree that it does tells us something about the group itself (though obviously question was vague, so...).
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Replying to @PhilosophyExp
No. Without some way of knowing other identifiers of the group it tells us nothing. You could establish this through follow up.
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Replying to @PhilosophyExp
Doc Cog. Neuro. Post doc Stat modeling. Headed survey research for international org.
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Replying to @mankinholes
Well, I promise not to submit any Twitter surveys to peer reviewed articles in the domain of cognitive neuroscience!


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Replying to @PhilosophyExp
You’ve already given me the abstract for my next paper...Based on a 44 person Twitter survey response...
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Replying to @mankinholes
I've seen similar! Maybe not Twitter surveys, but definitely self-selecting online surveys - sexual harassment, for example.
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Replying to @PhilosophyExp
Often thought the data you collect on your experiment page must be pretty substantial by now. You should look to commercialize that.
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Yeah, it is. Plus there's quite a lot of hidden stuff going on (switch race of photos that sort of thing). Still self-selecting, though...
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