VikeMan
It ain't all burritos and strippers, my friend.
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Whatever people think of these "experiments", one can't hide from the fact that most people, experienced beer drinkers or not, usually can't tell the difference between beer A and beer B.
Except that fact is not a fact at all. Here is a rather typical example:
"While 15 tasters (p<0.05) would have had to identify the unique sample in order to reach statistical significance, only 13 (p=0.10) made the accurate selection, indicating participants in this xBmt could not reliably distinguish an IPA made with a 7.4 oz/209.4 g dry hop charge from one made with an 11 oz/311.8 g dry hop charge."
Note that 13 tasters accurately selected the different sample, and that p=0.10.
This means that if there were no detectable difference between the beers, there was only a 10% chance that 13 or more tasters would get it right. But they did. To translate that into "indicating participants in this xBmt could not reliably distinguish" is misleading as hell. Anyone reading those words and not thoroughly familiar with triangle testing and p values would be very likely to think "the results show that there's no difference."
More reading: http://sonsofalchemy.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Understanding_Brulosophy_2.pdf