In a story that is likely to get weirder before it gets saner, a paper published in the journal PLOS One has made some, shall we say rather unusual claims. Read on.
[Updated 5:30pm 3 March 2016]
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According to Retraction Watch (seriously, how much do I love these folks) an article recently published in PLOS One is raising a few eyebrows for some interesting turns of phrase. The paper, “Biomechanical Characteristics of Hand Coordination in Grasping Activities of Daily Living,” seems in large part to focus on how much the biomechanical architecture of the human hand drives the ways in which we perform manual tasks — which seems to me to be basically asking “when we pick things up, are we working with our hands or against them?” They seem to conclude that, yes, the way we use our hands is largely driven by the way they’re structured, which (and again, this is all if I’m understand this right) is a perfectly mediocre conclusion and unlikely to turn heads.
What’s got people in a bit of a tizwaz online is, well, this passage (emphasis mine):
“Then, the functional link between biomechanical architecture and hand coordination was drawn by establishing the clear corresponding causality between the tendinous connective characteristics of the human hand and the coordinated characteristics during daily grasping activities. The explicit functional link indicates that the biomechanical characteristic of tendinous connective architecture between muscles and articulations is the proper design by the Creator to perform a multitude of daily tasks in a comfortable way.”
“The Creator” is mentioned a few more times in the paper, in equally bizarre ways.
Now, part of me wants to give these guys the benefit of the doubt. Maybe something got lost in the translation from Chinese to English. It can happen. Given that they go on to conclude that “the clear link between the structure and the function of the human hand also suggests that the design of a multifunctional robotic hand should be able to better imitate such basic architecture,” maybe they mean it’s the proper design a creator (that is, someone creating an artificial hand) should pursue? Replace “by the Creator” with “for a creator,” maybe? But then…
“Hand coordination should indicate the mystery of the Creator’s invention.”
…so maybe not. This is such a weird one that even the editor involved seems perplexed. According to Retraction Watch, when contacted, the paper’s editor responded “I am sorry for this has happened. I am contacting PLoS one to see whether we can fix the issue,” which, again, seems to me to have lost something in translation.
As I said above, this is likely to get stranger in the explanation, so I’ll keep my eye out for further developments and let you know.
[Update 5:30pm EST 3 March 2016: Two updates to report. /u/yellownumberfive in reddit’s r/skeptic community has let me know that it does indeed seem to be a translation issue (if also an editing issue):
Mingjin replied to anxo1 on 03 Mar 2016 at 13:09 GMT
Unfortunately for the authors, the journal appears to be pulling it anyway, possibly for other reasons, according to Retraction Watch:
I might bring you more if more develops.]
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Richard Ford Burley is a human, writer, and doctoral candidate at Boston College, as well as an editor at Ledger, the first academic journal devoted to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. In his spare time he writes about science, skepticism, feminism, and futurism here at This Week In Tomorrow.