jrjones9933 wrote:
Not peer reviewed or published.
It's been on peer-review several times, and the reason it was not published was because it was too controversial for the journals involved, and not because of flaws in the study, which the peer-reviewers couldn't point out. Rather, they simply disliked the research as it challenged their long-held theories and prejudices.
jrjones9933 wrote:
N>3,000, which looks promising, but the quiz was taken online from a variety of unspecified sources.
The quiz has been both peer-reviewed and published, so that is not valid.
jrjones9933 wrote:
I doubt it will pass peer review or get published, despite being exciting reading. There's no way to know how many of the "women" who took the quiz actually identify as women, or have lady parts.
Now you are just being silly.
People selected their gender long before they were asked about flashing. In fact, the question about flashing was mixed-up with normal autistic questions, only given to women, and participants primarily did Aspie Quiz to see if they had autistic traits. IOW, getting this survey was completely unexpected. Additionally, there was no direct link to the survey, rather, people had to fill out 100+ questions in Aspie Quiz first.