When I worked full time, I always found myself sucked in to buying whatever was being flogged by the kids' schools of my colleagues. Thus, I ended up with an awful lot of overpriced, scimpily-packaged wrapping paper (one roll = enough wrapping for one paperback); giant milk chocolate candy bars completely lacking in taste; and - ta-da - Yankee Candle candles, which, as a local, Massachusetts-own company seems to have a grip on the fundraising initiatives of our schools. (True confession: on a leaf-peeping jaunt to Western Mass a few years back, I did stop at their flagship store in South Deerfield. I don't recall buying anything.)
“There are angry ladies all over Yankee Candle’s site reporting that none of the candles they just got had any smell at all,” she wrote on Twitter [in late November 2020]. “I wonder if they’re feeling a little hot and nothing has much taste for the last couple days too,” she added, a nod to other common coronavirus symptoms. (Source: Washington Post)Nelson's notion got a lot of attention, and Kate Petrova, a researcher at Bryn Mawr College, took things a step further. She:
...decided to test the hypothesis by scraping roughly 20,000 reviews of the most popular scented and unscented candles on Amazon.
“It is rare, at least in my line of work, to stumble upon an anecdotal observation that can be examined using such vast amounts of easily accessible data,” said Petrova, who stressed that this was a personal project with no relation to her research work.It turns out that there was something to that "anecdotal observation." Over the prior year, scented candles have lost a full star from their ratings.
Unscented candle reviews, meanwhile, don’t show the same pattern.Fast forward a year of living dangerously, and a maths PhD candidate from Zurich named Eleanor (zornsllama on Twitter) mapped the negative, no-scent reviews to covid cases. And voila:
Neither Petrova nor Eleanor/zornsllama is making any claims about the scientific rigor of what they've come up with. And Yankee Candle claims they haven't seen anything different about covid-era reviews. Still, the correlation is interesting. Fun, even, if anything associated with covid can be termed 'fun.'
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