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Carl Heneghan

Carl Heneghan

Director of the CEBM, GP and clinical lecturer at the University of Oxford.

Ami Banerjee

Ami Banerjee

Cardiology trainee and clinical research fellow at the University of Oxford

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    age perception

    The end of beer goggles

    Ami Banerjee
    Posted 22nd April 2009 @ 05:59pm

    When I learned about evidence-based medicine (EBM) as an undergraduate, I remember thinking that there were just too many crucial health questions waiting to be answered. There was not enough time for EBM to solve the more banal problems of daily life. How wrong I was.

    Last week, the British press reported on a topic close to the hearts of millions of men seeking a mate after an evening of drinking [1, 2]. Does alcohol interfere with perception of beauty? The term, "beer goggles", has been used to describe the phenomenon of "alcohol myopia" since the early 1990s. Do “beer goggles” exist? The study apparently showed that there was no evidence for beer goggles and suggested that “the effect of "beer goggles" should not be used as an excuse for men getting a woman's age wrong”.

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