Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • PRESS RELEASE
  • Shop
  • BUSINESS
    • CRYPTO
    • ECONOMY
    • FINANCE
    • MARKET
    • MONEY
  • TECH
    • APPS
    • GADGET
    • MOBILE
    • SCIENCE
  • SOCIAL MEDIA
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS & THEATER
    • GAMING
    • GAMBLING
    • MOVIE
    • MUSIC
    • SHOWS
    • SPORTS
  • LIFESTYLE
    • CELEBRITY
    • CULTURE
    • Education
    • FASHION
    • FOOD
    • HEALTH
    • HISTORY
    • Nature
    • Religion
    • Shopping
    • TRAVEL
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Blog
  • Classifieds
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • PRESS RELEASE
  • Shop
  • BUSINESS
    • CRYPTO
    • ECONOMY
    • FINANCE
    • MARKET
    • MONEY
  • TECH
    • APPS
    • GADGET
    • MOBILE
    • SCIENCE
  • SOCIAL MEDIA
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS & THEATER
    • GAMING
    • GAMBLING
    • MOVIE
    • MUSIC
    • SHOWS
    • SPORTS
  • LIFESTYLE
    • CELEBRITY
    • CULTURE
    • Education
    • FASHION
    • FOOD
    • HEALTH
    • HISTORY
    • Nature
    • Religion
    • Shopping
    • TRAVEL
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Blog
  • Classifieds
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home SCIENCE

Scientific Fraud Is Slippery to Catch—but Easier to Combat

by Montana Digital News
January 19, 2023
in SCIENCE
0
Scientific Fraud Is Slippery to Catch—but Easier to Combat
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Like much of the internet, PubPeer is the sort of place where you might want to be anonymous. There, under randomly assigned taxonomic names like Actinopolyspora biskrensis (a bacterium) and Hoya camphorifolia (a flowering plant), “sleuths” meticulously document mistakes in the scientific literature. Though they write about all sorts of errors, from bungled statistics to nonsensical methodology, their collective expertise is in manipulated images: clouds of protein that show suspiciously crisp edges, or identical arrangements of cells in two supposedly distinct experiments. Sometimes, these irregularities mean nothing more than that a researcher tried to beautify a figure before submitting it to a journal. But they nevertheless raise red flags. 

PubPeer’s rarefied community of scientific detectives has produced an unlikely celebrity: Elisabeth Bik, who uses her uncanny acuity to spot image duplications that would be invisible to practically any other observer. Such duplications can allow scientists to conjure results out of thin air by Frankensteining parts of many images together or to claim that one image represents two separate experiments that produced similar results. But even Bik’s preternatural eye has limitations: It’s possible to fake experiments without actually using the same image twice. “If there’s a little overlap between the two photos, I can nail you,” she says. “But if you move the sample a little farther, there’s no overlap for me to find.” When the world’s most visible expert can’t always identify fraud, combating it—or even studying it—might seem an impossibility. 

Nevertheless, good scientific practices can effectively reduce the impact of fraud—that is, outright fakery—on science, whether or not it is ever discovered. Fraud “cannot be excluded from science, just like we cannot exclude murder in our society,” says Marcel van Assen, a principal investigator in the Meta-Research Center at the Tillburg School of Social and Behavioral Sciences. But as researchers and advocates continue to push science to be more open and impartial, he says, fraud “will be less prevalent in the future.”

Alongside sleuths like Bik, “metascientists” like van Assen are the world’s fraud experts. These researchers systematically track the scientific literature in an effort to ensure it is as accurate and robust as possible. Metascience has existed in its current incarnation since 2005, when John Ioannidis—a once-lauded Stanford University professor who has recently fallen into disrepute for his views on the Covid-19 pandemic, such as a fierce opposition to lockdowns—published a paper with the provocative title “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False.” Small sample sizes and bias, Ioannidis argued, mean that incorrect conclusions often end up in the literature, and those errors are too rarely discovered, because scientists would much rather further their own research agendas than try to replicate the work of colleagues. Since that paper, metascientists have honed their techniques for studying bias, a term that covers everything from so-called “questionable research practices”—failing to publish negative results or applying statistical tests over and over again until you find something interesting, for example—to outright data fabrication or falsification.

They take the pulse of this bias by looking not at individual studies but at overall patterns in the literature. When smaller studies on a particular topic tend to show more dramatic results than larger studies, for example, that can be an indicator of bias. Smaller studies are more variable, so some of them will end up being dramatic by chance—and in a world where dramatic results are favored, those studies will get published more often. Other approaches involve looking at p-values, numbers that indicate whether a given result is statistically significant or not. If, across the literature on a given research question, too many p-values seem significant, and too few are not, then scientists may be using questionable approaches to try to make their results seem more meaningful.

But those patterns don’t indicate how much of that bias is attributable to fraud rather than dishonest data analysis or innocent errors. There’s a sense in which fraud is intrinsically unmeasurable, says Jennifer Byrne, a professor of molecular oncology at the University of Sydney who has worked to identify potentially fraudulent papers in cancer literature. “Fraud is about intent. It’s a psychological state of mind,” she says. “How do you infer a state of mind and intent from a published paper?” 



Source link

Montana Digital News

Montana Digital News

Next Post
SDCL EDGE Acquisition Corporation Receives Notification from the NYSE of Non‑Compliance with the Listing Rule to Maintain a Minimum of 300 Public Stockholders on a Continuous Basis

SDCL EDGE Acquisition Corporation Receives Notification from the NYSE of Non‑Compliance with the Listing Rule to Maintain a Minimum of 300 Public Stockholders on a Continuous Basis

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

East Helena
◉
3°
Partly Cloudy
7:55 am5:25 pm MST
Feels like: -15°F
Wind: 12mph NNW
Humidity: 61%
Pressure: 30.6"Hg
UV index: 0
SunMonTue
5/-11°F
12/3°F
27/18°F
Weather forecast East Helena, Montana ▸
HHS Releases Report Detailing Biden-Harris Administration Efforts to Protect Reproductive Health Care Since Dobbs
PRESS RELEASE

Biden-Harris Administration to Launch Summit Series to Advance Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Economic Equity

by Montana Digital News
January 29, 2023
Biden-Harris Administration Protects Boundary Waters Area Watershed
PRESS RELEASE

Biden-Harris Administration Protects Boundary Waters Area Watershed

by Montana Digital News
January 29, 2023
USDA Announces Grants for Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production
PRESS RELEASE

USDA Announces Grants for Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Press Release | Press Releases | Newsroom
PRESS RELEASE

Press Release | Press Releases | Newsroom

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Press Release | Press Releases | Newsroom
PRESS RELEASE

Press Release | Press Releases | Newsroom | U.S. Senator Bill … – Senator Bill Cassidy

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
AI Now Complete With Built-in Stereotyping
SCIENCE

AI Now Complete With Built-in Stereotyping

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Xiaomi 11T and Poco F4 are receiving Android 13-based MIUI 14
MOBILE

Xiaomi 11T and Poco F4 are receiving Android 13-based MIUI 14

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Apple could limit WiFi 6E availability to iPhone 15 Pro models
GADGET

Apple could limit WiFi 6E availability to iPhone 15 Pro models

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
The apps that so easily beset us
APPS

The apps that so easily beset us

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
S&P Ratings turns negative on property, casualty insurers amid weak credit trends
MARKET

S&P Ratings turns negative on property, casualty insurers amid weak credit trends

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Links 1/28/2023 | naked capitalism
ECONOMY

Links 1/28/2023 | naked capitalism

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Statement from Agriculture Secretary Vilsack on Departure of Deputy Secretary Jewel Bronaugh
PRESS RELEASE

Statement from Agriculture Secretary Vilsack on Departure of Deputy Secretary Jewel Bronaugh

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Sam Bankman-Fried seeks to access FTX funds
CRYPTO

Sam Bankman-Fried seeks to access FTX funds

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Junior Theatre Festival Australia 2022 Highlights
ARTS & THEATER

Junior Theatre Festival Australia 2022 Highlights

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023
Phil Spencer Defends Future Of Halo Amid Cuts And Criticism
GAMING

Phil Spencer Defends Future Of Halo Amid Cuts And Criticism

by Montana Digital News
January 28, 2023

Category

  • APPS
  • ARTS & THEATER
  • Blog
  • BUSINESS
  • CELEBRITY
  • CRYPTO
  • CULTURE
  • ECONOMY
  • Education
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • FASHION
  • FINANCE
  • FOOD
  • GADGET
  • Gambling
  • GAMING
  • HEALTH
  • HISTORY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MARKET
  • MOBILE
  • MONEY
  • MOVIE
  • MUSIC
  • Nature
  • News
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Religion
  • SCIENCE
  • Shopping
  • SHOWS
  • SOCIAL MEDIA
  • SPORTS
  • TECH
  • TRAVEL
  • Uncategorized
PRESS RELEASE

Biden-Harris Administration to Launch Summit Series to Advance Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Economic Equity

January 29, 2023
PRESS RELEASE

Biden-Harris Administration Protects Boundary Waters Area Watershed

January 29, 2023
PRESS RELEASE

USDA Announces Grants for Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production

January 28, 2023
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright Notice
  • Anti Spam Policy
  • Medical Disclaimer
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Social Media Disclaimer
  • Amazon Affiliate disclaimer

© 2022 Montana Digital News

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • PRESS RELEASE
  • Shop
  • BUSINESS
    • CRYPTO
    • ECONOMY
    • FINANCE
    • MARKET
    • MONEY
  • TECH
    • APPS
    • GADGET
    • MOBILE
    • SCIENCE
  • SOCIAL MEDIA
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS & THEATER
    • GAMING
    • GAMBLING
    • MOVIE
    • MUSIC
    • SHOWS
    • SPORTS
  • LIFESTYLE
    • CELEBRITY
    • CULTURE
    • Education
    • FASHION
    • FOOD
    • HEALTH
    • HISTORY
    • Nature
    • Religion
    • Shopping
    • TRAVEL
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Blog
  • Classifieds

© 2022 Montana Digital News