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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    5 Ways to Ruin a Self Experiment (and what to do instead)

    Last Modified: Jan 26, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Self-experiments aren't just fun; they're also the only way you can get a truly custom-made diet, nutrition that's optimized just for you. Any dietary template, even Paleo, is based on generalizations about how certain foods affect most people. Most people feel fine when they eat a reasonable amount of starch. Most people lose more weight when they exercise than when they donโ€™t. But maybe you arenโ€™t โ€œmost people.โ€ Itโ€™s silly to keep doing something that doesnโ€™t work for you just because itโ€™s good for โ€œmost people.โ€

    At the most basic level, experimenting on yourself is as simple as โ€œtry it and see how you feel,โ€ but paying just a little bit of attention to designing your experiment can get you much more useful information in return for your trouble. For example, when was the last time you saw a study abstract that looked like this:

    The Effects of a Healthy Diet, Increased Exercise, and Social Interaction on Joe Paleoโ€™s Weight, Blood Pressure, Blood Lipids, and Mood over 12 Hours

    This study measured the effects of Joe Paleoโ€™s attempts to โ€œeat healthyโ€ (defined by what the study subject thought โ€œlooked good for himโ€), increased exercise (as measured by the subjectโ€™s feelings of being โ€œwipedโ€ after his first day of CrossFit), and social interaction (during the subjectโ€™s birthday party) on 4 biomarkers over a 12-hour period. Joe was weighed and measurements were taken after the conclusion of the 12 hours. Joe was way overweight, blood pressure was pretty low, total cholesterol was on the high end of normal, and mood was fine. We conclude that broccoli intake promotes obesity and raises cholesterol, but lowers blood pressure; however, the confounding effects of Joeโ€™s cake intake (3 slices at the party) cannot be ignored.

    This โ€œstudyโ€ would be laughed right out of PubMed, but this is how many people make changes in their lives: take on way too many things at once, rely on vague parameters and measurements, and then forget all about it the next day!

    5 Ways to Ruin a Self-Experiment

    self experimentation main

    1. No Baseline

    Joe's experiment above is like a before and after photo with no before, so it doesn't really tell us anything. Maybe he was having a fantastic week before the changes, and his mood went down to โ€œfine.โ€ Then the changes would be a bad idea. But maybe he spent the previous five days curled up in a corner listening to his old Evanescence CDs โ€“ in that case, โ€œfineโ€ would be a significant improvement. Maybe he was even โ€œfineโ€ the whole time, so the changes had no effect at all. The point is that we canโ€™t tell, because we donโ€™t have a โ€œbeforeโ€ to compare to the โ€œafter.โ€

    What should you do instead? Take measurements before you start any kind of intervention, so you can see how the intervention affects you. If itโ€™s something like blood pressure, which normally fluctuates over the course of a day, take regular measurements for several days first. This even applies to subjective markers like mood and energy: keep a journal and write it down. Then youโ€™ll be able to compare your before and after, to see what effect the changes actually had.

    2. Too Many Variables

    Joe's experiment makes it impossible to make a clear connection between any of his biomarkers and any of the interventions, because thereโ€™s no way of separating the effects of all the different changes. You canโ€™t conclude that starting a Vitamin D supplement improved your mood if you also started a better job, adopted a puppy, and moved across the country at the same time. Inevitably youโ€™re going to have some uncontrolled variables in your experiments, because thatโ€™s just the way real life works. But try to control for these confounding factors as much as possible: the easiest way is to only change one variable at a time, instead of switching up everything and trying to pin the results on one of many factors.

    What if you want to test two different things as they relate to each other? No problem: just do three different experiments. Say you want to know about the effects of taking a probiotic supplement and eating probiotic foods. For the first experiment, try only the probiotic supplement. Then take a break to let your body reset. For the second, try only the probiotic food. Take another break. For the third experiment, try both. Then you can distinguish between the effects of the supplement, the effects of the food, and the effects of using both together.

    3. Stopping too soon

    Joeโ€™s experiment ran for only 12 hours, which isnโ€™t long enough to see any significant long-term trends. To avoid premature conclusions, the self-experiment experts at Quantified Self suggest running your self-experiment until you get between 5 and 40 (ideally 10-20) days of โ€œflat resultsโ€ (no change in whatever youโ€™re measuring). The actual experiment might take much longer, if the data keep changing.

    Major lifestyle changes can take several days or even weeks to show results. Sometimes thereโ€™s an initial change followed by a plateau. Sometimes, thereโ€™s an initial increase, followed by a decrease, or vice versa. For example, people who transition to a Paleo diet often have to fight through a few weeks of cravings and mood swings before they start seeing all the benefits. Two days in, it seems like Paleo makes everything worse. But stick with it a little longer, and the benefits will finally kick in.

    4. Not using accurate measurements

    Joe didnโ€™t use any accurate measurements or even attempt to quantify what he was testing. โ€œWay overweightโ€ is not science! Quantifying your changes and results gives you the data to make actually useful observations, and also forces you to be honest about how much of a change youโ€™re actually making. Notice that Joe was trying to โ€œeat healthyโ€ but also had 3 slices of birthday cake, and then concluded that โ€œeating healthyโ€ promoted obesity! Keeping a food journal would have forced him to be more honest, and made the experiment more valuable.

    To avoid this trap, use some kind of consistent method to measure your changes and your results.  With something like blood sugar or weight, measurement is pretty easy. For diet, you can keep a food journal of what you ate. With a factor thatโ€™s more nebulous, like mood or insomnia, keep a record detailing your symptoms before, during, and after the experiment, and come up with some reasonable way to quantify them. For example, you could track your mood on a scale of 1-10.

    5. Not keeping records

    Joe avoids this one completely, because his study was so short that there arenโ€™t any records to keep! But run any experiment for a reasonable amount of time, and youโ€™ll end up with a bunch of data: food records, weights on different days, and so on. Getting this data is the whole reason for running the experiment in the first place, so donโ€™t throw it away. After all, you can't possibly learn from your results if you don't remember them. Just taking a look at all your data together can reveal trends or associations you didn't even know were there.  Record your results in whatever way makes sense for your experiment, so you can review them when you're done, or plug them into Excel and make a graph (great for spotting trends, or just for showing off to your friends).

    Designing a Good Self Experiment

    As opposed to the terrible experiment design above, an example of a useful self-experiment plan might go something like:

    The Effects of Magnesium Supplementation on Joe Paleoโ€™s Sleep

    Joe studied the effects of oral magnesium supplementation (300mg magnesium citrate) on his sleep quality and energy. He predicted that the magnesium would help him get to sleep. He measured his sleep using the SleepCycle app for his iPhone, and kept a daily record of how tired he felt on a scale of 1 (zombie) to 10 (Energizer Bunny). He started measuring his sleep a week before starting the magnesium to get a baseline measurement, then started the magnesium and continued tracking 2 weeks. He also tracked his mood, bowel movements, and muscle soreness after workouts, because his research showed that magnesium can affect those things as well. On average, Joe got 18 more minutes of quality sleep per night, and his average energy increased from a 6 to a 6.5. He concluded that the magnesium was helping and kept taking it.

    Notice the numbers! Everything is specific, detailed, and quantified. The experiment lasted for a reasonable amount of time. This "abstract" is about as long as the first one, only instead of measuring many things uselessly, it measures one thing well. It gives Joe useful information that he can actually take action on.

    More tips for designing a great self-experiment include:

    • Use the scientific method: identify a question, do some research, make a prediction, and then do your experiment. Itโ€™s not perfect, but it does help you organize your experiment in a logical way.
    • Be prepared to be wrong. Sometimes, your predictions wonโ€™t come true; thatโ€™s fine, too.
    • Share your results. Sometimes, another person can help you figure out what it all means, and how you can actually use your data to make changes in your life.

    There are also plenty of resources available to help you take n = 1 from OK to amazing:

    • Chris Masterjohn explains how to make a self-experiment closer to a controlled trial by using repeated observations and randomization to make up for a small sample size. This post is a perfect โ€œSelf-Experimentation 102โ€ for people who want to get a little more scientific without a huge time or money investment in the process.
    • Quantified Self is a community of self-experimentation enthusiasts. If you have any questions about tools, gadgets, gear, or techniques, or you just need some ideas for what to measure next, this is the place to go.
    • Biohack Yourself, a site dedicated to gaining optimal health and productivity through self-experimentation, maintains a list of blogs, sites, and other resources for self-experimenters. Some of the best-known include Dave Asprey, Tim Ferriss, and Seth Roberts.
    • Some interesting articles at Scientific American explore famous self-researchers in scientific history, and what they discovered. Donโ€™t read the article and immediately run off to chug some H. pylori, though โ€“ some of those experiments are crazy!
    • CureTogether lets you take advantage of other peopleโ€™s self-experiments, too: you can search for almost any health condition, and find out what worked for everyone else.
    • Paleohacks is an online message board to ask questions, perfect for getting feedback on your results, or advice when you're stuck.

    Whether youโ€™re a veteran self-experimenter or just starting out, thereโ€™s always something more to find out. The article index is a great place for ideas, or you could start by just doing a search for anything youโ€™d like to optimize, to find out what other people are trying. Good luck!

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