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The job of pollsters has become much harder. Here’s how they’re responding

Businessman using pen and laptop online check survey filling out, digital form checklist satisfaction questionnaire and feedback report result of voting client. Business performance monitoring concept

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Last December, a joint survey by The Economist and the polling organization YouGov claimed to reveal a striking antisemitic streak among America’s youth. One in five young Americans thinks the Holocaust is a myth, according to the poll. And 28 percent think Jews in America have too much power.

β€œOur new poll makes alarming reading,” declared The Economist. The results inflamed discourse over the Israel-Hamas war on social media and made international news.

There was one problem: The survey was almost certainly wrong. The Economist/YouGov poll was a so-called opt-in poll, in which pollsters often pay people they've recruited online to take surveys. According to a recent analysis from the nonprofit Pew Research Center, such polls are plagued by β€œbogus respondents” who answer questions disingenuously for fun, or to get through the survey as quickly as possible to earn their reward.

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Is having a pet good for you? The fuzzy science of pet ownership

A picture of a bull terrier on a park bench

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For more than a decade, in blog posts and scientific papers and public talks, the psychologist Hal Herzog has questioned whether owning pets makes people happier and healthier.

It is a lonely quest, convincing people that puppies and kittens may not actually be terrific for their physical and mental health. β€œWhen I talk to people about this,” Herzog recently said, β€œnobody believes me.” A prominent professor at a major public university once described him as β€œa super curmudgeon” who is, in effect, β€œtrying to prove that apple pie causes cancer.”

As a teenager in New Jersey in the 1960s, Herzog kept dogs and cats, as well as an iguana, a duck, and a boa constrictor named Boa. Now a professor emeritus at Western Carolina University, he insists he’s not out to smear anyone’s furry friends. In a blog post questioning the so-called pet effect, in 2012, Herzog included a photo of his cat, Tilly. β€œShe makes my life better,” he wrote. β€œPlease Don’t Blame The Messenger!”

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