8 Scientific American, March 2021
LETTERS
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ESTABLISHED 1845
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN CUSTOM MEDIA
EDITORIAL Gareth Cook, Katherine Harmon Courage, Lydia Denworth,
Ferris Jabr, Anna Kuchment, Robin Lloyd, Steve Mirsky,
Melinda Wenner Moyer, George Musser, Ricki L. Rusting,
Dan Schlenoff, Dava Sobel, Claudia Wallis
ART Edward Bell, Zoë Christie, Lawrence R. Gendron, Nick Higgins, Katie Peek, Beatrix Mahd Soltani
EDITOR IN CHIEF
Laura Helmuth
A R T
ART DIRECTOR Jason Mischka SENIOR GRAPHICS EDITOR Jen Christiansen
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Monica Bradley ART DIRECTOR, ONLINE Ryan Reid
ASSOCIATE GRAPHICS EDITOR Amanda Montañez ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR Liz Tormes
COPY AND PRODUCTION
SENIOR COPY EDITORS Angelique Rondeau, Aaron Shattuck
MANAGING PRODUCTION EDITOR Richard Hunt PREPRESS AND QUALITY MANAGER Silvia De Santis
CONTRIBUTORS
MANAGING EDITOR Curtis Brainard COPY DIRECTOR Maria-Christina Keller CREATIVE DIRECTOR Michael Mrak
E D I T O R I A L
CHIEF FEATURES EDITOR Seth Fletcher CHIEF NEWS EDITOR Dean Visser CHIEF OPINION EDITOR Michael D. Lemonick
FEATURES
SENIOR EDITOR, SUSTAINABILITY Mark Fischetti
SENIOR EDITOR, MEDICINE / SCIENCE POLICY Josh Fischman
SENIOR EDITOR, SPACE / PHYSICS Clara Moskowitz
SENIOR EDITOR, SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Madhusree Mukerjee
SENIOR EDITOR, TECHNOLOGY / MIND Jen Schwartz
SENIOR EDITOR, EVOLUTION / ECOLOGY Kate Wong
NEWS
SENIOR EDITOR, MIND / BRAIN Gary Stix
SENIOR EDITOR, SPACE / PHYSICS Lee Billings
SENIOR EDITOR, HEALTH AND MEDICINE Tanya Lewis
ASSOCIATE EDITOR, TECHNOLOGY Sophie Bushwick
ASSOCIATE EDITOR, SUSTAINABILITY Andrea Thompson
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR Sarah Lewin Frasier
MULTIMEDIA
SENIOR EDITOR, MULTIMEDIA Jeffery DelViscio
SENIOR EDITOR, AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT Sunya Bhutta SENIOR EDITOR, COLLECTIONS Andrea Gawrylewski
EDITORIAL ADMINISTRATOR Ericka Skirpan EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR Maya Harty
EDITORS EMERITI Mariette DiChristina, John Rennie
MANAGING EDITOR Cliff Ransom CREATIVE DIRECTOR Wojtek Urbanek
MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Kris Fatsy MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Ben Gershman
ENGAGEMENT EDITOR Dharmesh Patel ACCOUNT MANAGER Samantha Lubey
CORPORATE
HEAD, COMMUNICATIONS, USA Rachel Scheer
PRESS MANAGER Sarah Hausman
ANCILLARY PRODUCTS
CONSUMER MARKETING & PRODUCT
DEVELOPMENT TEAM LEAD Raja Abdulhaq
SENIOR MARKETING MANAGER Christopher Monello
PRODUCT MANAGERS Ian Kelly, John Murren
SENIOR WEB PRODUCER Jessica Ramirez
SENIOR COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS COORDINATOR Christine Kaelin
MARKETING & CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSISTANT Justin Camera
ACTING PRESIDENT
Stephen Pincock
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Michael Florek VICE PRESIDENT, COMMERCIAL Andrew Douglas
PUBLISHER AND VICE PRESIDENT Jeremy A. Abbate
CLIENT MARKETING SOLUTIONS
MARKETING DIRECTOR, INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERSHIPS AND CUSTOMER DEVELOPMENT Jessica Cole
PROGRAMMATIC PRODUCT MANAGER Zoya Lysak
DIRECTOR, INTEGRATED MEDIA Matt Bondlow
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Stan Schmidt
HEAD, PUBLISHING STRATEGY Suzanne Fromm
ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Diane McGarvey
CUSTOM PUBLISHING EDITOR Lisa Pallatroni
PRINT PRODUCTION
PRODUCTION CONTROLLER Madelyn Keyes-Milch ADVERTISING PRODUCTION CONTROLLER Dan Chen
MASK MISTAKE?
In “Scientists: Use Common Sense” [Obser-
vatory], Naomi Oreskes criticizes the World
Health Organization for initially advising
people not to wear masks in response to
COVID-19 in April. She gives two reasons
the WHO did so: (1) A medical mask short-
age would result for critical care workers.
(2) Masks would give people a false sense
of security. I concur with Oreskes in reject-
ing 2. But 1 was a powerful argument at the
time. If an N95 mask manufacturer could
get a higher price from pharmacies or other
customers than it could from hospitals, what
does she think would have happened?
Fortunately, the problem was solved—
at least here in Los Angeles County, where
our local officials wisely recognized that
wearing any mask, even a simple cloth one,
would help and organized local garment
manufacturers to turn them out. Yet at
present, with the start of the third wave
and companies openly selling N95 masks
to the public, we might be back in trouble
again. I hope this doesn’t happen. But I also
note that a responsible U.S. federal govern-
ment could have prevented it.
D. S. Burnett
California Institute of Technology
DATA AND DECEPTION
Your recent editions have had a number of
articles about misinformation. I would like
to introduce the notion that data precede
information, whether it constitutes misin-
formation or not. As any scientist can attest,
there are good and bad data. Good data are
obtained by careful control of conditions
and demonstration of reproducibility. Bad
data can arise from sloppiness, confirma-
tion bias or intentional falsification. Infor-
mation of any kind arises from analyzing
data; misinformation arises from bad data
or a distorted analysis of good data.
There are an enormous number of sourc-
es of intentionally bad data created to en-
trap people. How can our society step back
from the edge? Science in the U.S. is taught
as a series of facts to be accepted unques-
tioningly. Instead children need to be taught
the clear, critical thinking that underlies the
scientific enterprise. Many of the most egre-
gious bits of misinformation are, on inspec-
tion, stupid. Far too many Americans have
no capacity to identify “stupid.”
Arthur Moss Wilmington, Del.