A survey where they poll 100's of students.
It was a 2-step survey.
In a nutshell-
step 1- Ask students questions about sexual activity ( typical crap)
step 2- Ask same students back after 1 month and ask same questions when hooked up to a lie detector.
The results were very interesting:
Men far LESS sexual then they originally said and women far MORE, as an example.
The point was to show that people lie on surveys even if no one is going to know WHO said WHAT !
LOL !
This study was never publicized because, according to one of the developers, it would cause too much crap.
There was more to it then that but my point is that the study showed that people are very devious about certian things on surveys. like sex and, well, anything that is politically correct.
Example:
https://m.phys.org/news/2016-08-bias-di ... uples.html
Here is a summary:
A 2012 study by the Pew Research Center found that interracial marriages in the U.S. had doubled between 1980 and 2010 to about 15 percent, and just 11 percent of respondents disapproved of interracial marriage.
But new research from the University of Washington suggests that reported acceptance of interracial marriage masks deeper feelings of discomfort—even disgust—that some feel about mixed-race couples. Published online in July in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology and co-authored by UW postdoctoral researcher Caitlin Hudac, the study found that bias against interracial couples is associated with disgust that in turn leads interracial couples to be dehumanized.
Lead author Allison Skinner, a UW postdoctoral researcher, said she undertook the study after noting a lack of in-depth research on bias toward interracial couples.
"I felt like the polls weren't telling the whole story," said Skinner, a researcher in the UW's Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences.....
Taken together, the experiments show that despite high levels of reported acceptance, bias against mixed-race couples persists in the United States, the researchers say. In 2013, they note, Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen caused a furor when he wrote that New York Mayor Bill de Blasio's interracial marriage incited "a gag reflex" among some people, prompting the Post to write a follow-up story about the controversy.
Such sentiments, Skinner said, belie the notion that most Americans are ready to embrace mixed-race romance.
"Some people are still not comfortable with interracial relationships, or at least they're a lot less comfortable than they would appear to be," she said. "Acknowledging these biases is the first step to figuring out why people feel that way and determining what can be done so they won't."