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Normal Curves: Sexy Science, Serious Statistics
Regina Nuzzo and Kristin Sainani
21 episodes
1 week ago
Normal Curves is a podcast about sexy science & serious statistics. Ever try to make sense of a scientific study and the numbers behind it? Listen in to a lively conversation between two stats-savvy friends who break it all down with humor and clarity. Professors Regina Nuzzo of Gallaudet University and Kristin Sainani of Stanford University discuss academic papers journal club-style — except with more fun, less jargon, and some irreverent, PG-13 content sprinkled in. Join Kristin and Regina as they dissect the data, challenge the claims, and arm you with tools to assess scientific studies on your own.
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All content for Normal Curves: Sexy Science, Serious Statistics is the property of Regina Nuzzo and Kristin Sainani and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Normal Curves is a podcast about sexy science & serious statistics. Ever try to make sense of a scientific study and the numbers behind it? Listen in to a lively conversation between two stats-savvy friends who break it all down with humor and clarity. Professors Regina Nuzzo of Gallaudet University and Kristin Sainani of Stanford University discuss academic papers journal club-style — except with more fun, less jargon, and some irreverent, PG-13 content sprinkled in. Join Kristin and Regina as they dissect the data, challenge the claims, and arm you with tools to assess scientific studies on your own.
Show more...
Science
Society & Culture
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Ultramarathons: Can vitamin D protect your bones?
Normal Curves: Sexy Science, Serious Statistics
58 minutes
1 month ago
Ultramarathons: Can vitamin D protect your bones?

Ultramarathoners push their bodies to the limit, but can a giant pre-race dose of vitamin D really keep their bones from breaking down? In this episode, we dig into a trial that tested this claim – and found  a statistical endurance event of its own: six highly interchangeable papers sliced from one small study.  Expect missing runners, recycled figures, and a peer-review that reads like stand-up comedy, plus a quick lesson in using degrees of freedom as your statistical breadcrumbs.


Statistical topics

  • Data cleaning and validation
  • Degrees of freedom
  • Exploratory vs confirmatory analysis
  • False positives and Type I error
  • Intention-to-treat principle
  • Multiple testing
  • Open data and transparency
  • P-hacking
  • Salami slicing
  • Parametric vs non-parametric tests
  • Peer review quality
  • Randomized controlled trials
  • Research reproducibility
  • Statistical sleuthing

Methodological morals

  • “Degrees of freedom are the breadcrumbs in statistical sleuthing. They reveal the sample size even when the authors do not.”
  • “Publishing the same study again and again with only the outcomes swapped is Mad Libs Science, better known as salami slicing.”


References

  • Boswell, Rachel. Pre-race vitamin D could do wonders for ultrarunners’ bone health, according to science. Runner’s World. September 25, 2025. 
  • Mieszkowski J, Stankiewicz B, Kochanowicz A, et al. Ultra-Marathon-Induced Increase in Serum Levels of Vitamin D Metabolites: A Double-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial. Nutrients. 2020;12(12):3629. Published 2020 Nov 25. doi:10.3390/nu12123629
  • Mieszkowski J, Borkowska A, Stankiewicz B, et al. Single High-Dose Vitamin D Supplementation as an Approach for Reducing Ultramarathon-Induced Inflammation: A Double-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial. Nutrients. 2021;13(4):1280. Published 2021 Apr 13. doi:10.3390/nu13041280
  • Mieszkowski J, Brzezińska P, Stankiewicz B, et al. Direct Effects of Vitamin D Supplementation on Ultramarathon-Induced Changes in Kynurenine Metabolism. Nutrients. 2022;14(21):4485. Published 2022 Oct 25. doi:10.3390/nu14214485
  • Mieszkowski J, Brzezińska P, Stankiewicz B, et al. Vitamin D Supplementation Influences Ultramarathon-Induced Changes in Serum Amino Acid Levels, Tryptophan/Branched-Chain Amino Acid Ratio, and Arginine/Asymmetric Dimethylarginine Ratio. Nutrients. 2023;15(16):3536. Published 2023 Aug 11. doi:10.3390/nu15163536
  • Stankiewicz B, Mieszkowski J, Kochanowicz A, et al. Effect of Single High-Dose Vitamin D3 Supplementation on Post-Ultra Mountain Running Heart Damage and Iron Metabolism Changes: A Double-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial. Nutrients. 2024;16(15):2479. Published 2024 Jul 31. doi:10.3390/nu16152479
  • Stankiewicz B, Kochanowicz A, et al. Single high-dose vitamin D supplementation impacts ultramarathon-induced changes in serum levels of bone turnover markers: a double-blind randomized controlled trial. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2025 Dec;22(1):2561661. doi: 10.1080/15502783.2025.2561661.

Kristin and Regina’s online courses: 

Demystifying Data: A Modern Approach to Statistical Understanding  

Clinical Trials: Design, Strategy, and Analysis 

Medical Statistics Certificate Program  

Writing in the Sciences 

Epidemiology and Clinical Research Graduate Certificate Program 

Programs that we teach in:

Epidemiology and Clinical Research Graduate Certificate Program 


Find us on:

Kristin -  LinkedIn & Twitter/X

Regina - LinkedIn & ReginaNuzzo.com


 00:00 Intro & claim of the episode
 00:44 Runner’s World headline: Vitamin D for ultramarathoners
 02:03 Kristin’s connection to running and vitamin D skepticism
 03:32 Ultramarathon world—Regina’s stories and Death Valley race
 06:29 What ultramarathons do to your bones
 08:02 Boy story: four stress fractures in one race
 10:00 Study design—40 male runners in Poland
 11:33 Missing flow diagram and violated intention-to-treat
 13:02 The intervention: 150,000 IU megadose
 15:09 Blinding details and missing randomization info
 17:13 Measuring bone biomarkers—no primary outcome specified
 19:12 The wrong clinicaltrials.gov registration
 20:35 Discovery of six papers from one dataset (salami slicing)
 23:02 Why salami slicing misleads readers
 25:42 Inconsistent reporting across papers
 29:11 Changing inclusion criteria and sloppy methods
 31:06 Typos, Polish notes, and misnumbered references
 32:39 Peer review comedy gold—“Please define vitamin D”
 36:06 Reviewer laziness and p-hacking admission
 39:13 Results: implausible bone growth mid-race
 41:16 Degrees of freedom sleuthing reveals hidden sample sizes
 47:07 Open data? Kristin emails the authors
 48:42 Lessons from Kristin’s own ultramarathon dataset
 51:22 Fishing expeditions and misuse of parametric tests
 53:07 Strength of evidence: one smooch each
 54:44 Methodologic morals—Mad Libs Science & degrees of freedom breadcrumbs
 56:12 Anyone can spot red flags—trust your eyes
 57:34 Outro: skip the vitamin D shot before your next run 


Normal Curves: Sexy Science, Serious Statistics
Normal Curves is a podcast about sexy science & serious statistics. Ever try to make sense of a scientific study and the numbers behind it? Listen in to a lively conversation between two stats-savvy friends who break it all down with humor and clarity. Professors Regina Nuzzo of Gallaudet University and Kristin Sainani of Stanford University discuss academic papers journal club-style — except with more fun, less jargon, and some irreverent, PG-13 content sprinkled in. Join Kristin and Regina as they dissect the data, challenge the claims, and arm you with tools to assess scientific studies on your own.