169 Science claim verifications avg. score 5.1/10 67 rated true or mostly true 97 rated false or misleading
“Elephants communicate with each other using vocalizations that can be described as singing.”
Research confirms that elephants produce some vocalizations — particularly infrasonic rumbles — using the same vocal-fold vibration mechanism as human speech and singing. However, describing elephant communication as "singing" overstates the evidence. Scientists use "singing" as an analogy for the shared production physics, not as a validated behavioral classification. The only peer-reviewed paper in the evidence pool does not label elephant vocalizations as singing, and most supporting sources are press rewrites of a single 2012 finding about sound-production mechanics.
“The double-slit experiment demonstrates that the act of observation alters the outcome of quantum events.”
Mostly True. The double-slit experiment does demonstrate that performing a which-path measurement eliminates the interference pattern, a finding confirmed by peer-reviewed research and a 2025 MIT experiment showing a quantitative tradeoff between path information and interference visibility. However, the claim's use of "observation" is imprecise — the operative mechanism is physical measurement and information acquisition (decoherence), not conscious awareness. This ambiguity can foster the common misconception that human consciousness collapses quantum states.
“Nuclear power has a lower mortality rate per unit of electricity generated than solar energy.”
The comparative safety of nuclear versus solar energy depends on which dataset and methodology is used, and the claim presents a contested ordering as settled fact. The most widely cited compilation (Our World in Data) places solar slightly lower than nuclear in deaths per terawatt-hour (0.02 vs. 0.03), while one peer-reviewed study reverses that ordering. Crucially, Our World in Data cautions that uncertainties at these very low mortality rates likely overlap, making any definitive ranking fragile.
“Holding a warm drink causes people to perceive others as more friendly or warm.”
This popular psychology claim rests primarily on a single 2008 study that has not reliably replicated. A more rigorous replication attempt (Chabris et al., 2019) found no evidence for the effect, and methodological critiques highlight the original study's small sample size and borderline statistical significance. Most sources cited in support are press coverage or educational summaries of that same 2008 finding — not independent confirmations. Presenting this as an established causal relationship omits critical scientific debate.
“Pi (π) is a normal number, meaning every digit and sequence of digits appears with equal frequency in its decimal expansion.”
No mathematician has ever proven that π is a normal number — in any base. The claim presents an unresolved conjecture as established fact. While empirical tests on trillions of digits show distributions consistent with normality, consistency over a finite prefix cannot establish the infinite limiting-frequency property that normality requires. Every authoritative source in the evidence pool, including those most favorable to the claim, confirms that this remains one of the major open problems in mathematics.
“A proven connection exists between classical physics and quantum physics.”
Multiple rigorously established formal connections between classical and quantum physics — including the Correspondence Principle, Ehrenfest's theorem, and the Poisson bracket-to-commutator mapping — are well-documented across peer-reviewed literature and foundational physics textbooks. The claim that "a proven connection exists" is clearly supported. While the full problem of how classical macroscopic behavior completely emerges from quantum mechanics remains an open question, this does not negate the existence of proven connections — it only limits their scope.
“China has successfully landed a spacecraft on the far side of the Moon.”
China's far-side lunar landings are among the most well-documented space achievements of the past decade. Chang'e-4 soft-landed in the Von Kármán crater on January 3, 2019 — a world first — and Chang'e-6 followed with a second far-side landing in June 2024, also returning samples to Earth. These events are confirmed by Chinese state sources, major international wire services, and Western science media, with no credible dispute from any space agency or scientific body.
“The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park triggered a trophic cascade that fundamentally transformed the park's ecosystem.”
Wolf reintroduction did produce some trophic-cascade effects in parts of Yellowstone, but describing it as a force that "fundamentally transformed" the park's ecosystem overstates the scientific evidence. Peer-reviewed research and the National Park Service itself acknowledge that the cascade is weaker, more spatially variable, and more confounded by other factors — including hydrology, climate, and human elk harvest — than popular accounts suggest. Key quantitative claims underpinning the "transformation" narrative have been challenged as methodologically flawed in recent studies.
“Using artificial intelligence tools causes a decline in human intelligence over time.”
Research links cognitive risks to excessive or exclusive AI reliance, not to AI tool use in general — making this claim a significant overstatement. Multiple peer-reviewed studies find that heavy, passive dependence on AI can reduce cognitive engagement and retention, but the same literature emphasizes that moderate use shows minimal impact and that outcomes depend on how tools are used. The blanket causal framing strips away these critical conditions and ignores evidence that AI can also augment cognition.
“The Great Wall of China is visible from space with the naked eye.”
This widely repeated claim is a persistent myth debunked by NASA, peer-reviewed optical studies, and multiple astronauts. The Great Wall's width—only a few meters—falls far below the threshold of human visual acuity at orbital distances, regardless of its impressive length. NASA states the Wall is "difficult or impossible to see from Earth orbit" without high-powered lenses, and China's own astronaut Yang Liwei confirmed he could not see it. A handful of contested anecdotal quotes do not overturn the scientific and observational consensus.
“The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) lacks scientific validity as a personality assessment tool.”
Mainstream research psychology broadly regards the MBTI as lacking strong scientific validity, a position anchored by the APA's own assessment that it has "little credibility among research psychologists" and a 2025 systematic review finding 50% of participants receive different type results on retesting. The claim's absolute framing slightly overstates the case: some MBTI subscales show acceptable reliability in certain studies, and the sharpest criticisms target the forced binary "type" categorization rather than every psychometric property of the instrument.
“Having at least one person with different political or religious views in an individual's close personal network is associated with significantly less extreme beliefs in that individual.”
The underlying research supports a general link between cross-cutting social contact and reduced prejudice or affective polarization, but the claim overstates this by asserting that merely one differing-view close tie produces "significantly less extreme beliefs." Key studies actually measure prejudice or warmth toward out-groups—not belief extremity—and some research finds null or backfire effects depending on context and contact quality. The specific threshold framing and the word "significantly" go beyond what the evidence reliably demonstrates.
“The average human attention span is shorter than that of a goldfish.”
The "goldfish attention span" comparison is built on fabricated, untraceable data. The widely cited figures — 8 seconds for humans, 9 seconds for goldfish — originate from a Microsoft Canada marketing report that sourced them from "Statistic Brain," a reference that could not be verified by the National Library of Medicine. No peer-reviewed study supports either figure, and no validated method exists for measuring a goldfish's attention span. Multiple academic and expert sources identify this as a debunked myth.
“Subtle cues can influence people's decisions without their conscious awareness.”
Controlled experiments do show that information presented outside conscious awareness can measurably shift decision outcomes, supporting the core claim. However, the evidence is strongest for low-level perceptual and implicit memory effects, not for robust influence on complex real-world decisions. Critical reviews and a major meta-analysis reveal that many higher-order priming and nudge effects shrink dramatically or vanish after correcting for publication bias and methodological weaknesses. The claim is directionally correct but overstates the breadth and reliability of the phenomenon.
“Scientists have identified the destination of previously unaccounted-for missing ocean plastic.”
Misleading. Scientists have made significant progress identifying several fates for previously unaccounted-for ocean plastic — including fragmentation into nanoplastics, deep-sea accumulation, and coastal sediment trapping — but no single definitive "destination" has been established. The claim's framing implies a resolved mystery, when in reality multiple partial explanations coexist and the scientific community continues to debate whether the "missing plastic" problem itself may be partly an artifact of measurement limitations.
“A water reservoir located approximately 700 kilometers below Earth's surface contains more water than all of Earth's oceans combined.”
Misleading. While scientists have found evidence of water locked within minerals in Earth's mantle transition zone (410–660 km deep), the claim that this reservoir definitively "contains more water than all of Earth's oceans combined" overstates the science. The most rigorous peer-reviewed estimates place transition zone water at 0.2–1 ocean equivalents. The widely cited "three times all oceans" figure is a conditional upper bound assuming 1% water content — not a confirmed measurement. The water exists as chemically bound hydroxyl in rock, not as liquid.
“Sleeping after studying improves memory retention.”
This claim is well-supported. Multiple high-authority meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and experimental studies consistently confirm that sleeping after learning actively consolidates memories and improves later recall compared to staying awake. A small number of studies suggest quiet rest may offer similar short-term benefits, and effects can vary by task type and timing, but these caveats do not undermine the core claim. The scientific consensus strongly endorses sleep as beneficial for memory retention after studying.
“The Loch Ness Monster is a real, living creature inhabiting Loch Ness in Scotland.”
Comprehensive environmental DNA surveys of Loch Ness found no evidence of any large unknown reptile, giant fish, or other creature consistent with the "Loch Ness Monster." Multiple independent scientific studies instead detected only ordinary biodiversity, notably abundant eel DNA. Ecological analysis further indicates the loch's low-nutrient environment could not sustain a large unknown predator. Despite decades of searching, no specimen, remains, or verified scientific evidence has ever confirmed the creature's existence. The claim is not supported by credible evidence.
“Rising nighttime temperatures caused by climate change are disrupting sleep patterns on a global scale.”
The claim is largely accurate. Multiple peer-reviewed systematic reviews and large-scale studies — including data from 68 countries — confirm that rising nighttime temperatures degrade sleep quality and quantity worldwide. However, the evidence primarily establishes strong associations rather than formal climate-attribution causation, and the effects are highly uneven: the elderly, women, lower-income populations, and those without air conditioning are disproportionately affected. The core message holds, but "global scale" somewhat overstates the uniformity of the disruption.
“The James Webb Space Telescope has produced evidence that disproves the Big Bang theory as of March 26, 2026.”
This claim is false. As of March 2026, no peer-reviewed scientific body or credible institution has concluded that JWST disproved the Big Bang theory. NASA explicitly rejects this framing. JWST has revealed unexpectedly bright and mature early galaxies, prompting refinements to galaxy formation models — but the Big Bang's core evidence (cosmic microwave background, expansion, primordial nucleosynthesis) remains uncontradicted. The "disproof" narrative traces to fringe sources, creationist outlets, and a mischaracterization of normal scientific model adjustment as theoretical falsification.