https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-39054778
Science is facing a "reproducibility crisis" where more than two-thirds of researchers have tried and failed to reproduce another scientist's experiments, research suggests.
This is frustrating clinicians and drug developers who want solid foundations of pre-clinical research to build upon.
From his lab at the University of Virginia's Centre for Open Science, immunologist Dr Tim Errington runs The Reproducibility Project, which attempted to repeat the findings reported in five landmark cancer studies.
"The idea here is to take a bunch of experiments and to try and do the exact same thing to see if we can get the same results."
You could be forgiven for thinking that should be easy. Experiments are supposed to be replicable.
The authors should have done it themselves before publication, and all you have to do is read the methods section in the paper and follow the instructions.
Sadly nothing, it seems, could be further from the truth.
A crisis in Science ?: Replication of results from Studies
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Re: A crisis in Science ?: Replication of results from Studies
This has been brought up to the public's attention a few times already.
It's the drive to be published that is causing this.
Seems like science is taking a back seat to "scientism" and the universities and like settings are the ones driving this.
sci·en·tism
/ˈsīənˌtizəm/
Learn to pronounce
nounRARE
thought or expression regarded as characteristic of scientists.
excessive belief in the power of scientific knowledge and techniques.
It's the drive to be published that is causing this.
Seems like science is taking a back seat to "scientism" and the universities and like settings are the ones driving this.
sci·en·tism
/ˈsīənˌtizəm/
Learn to pronounce
nounRARE
thought or expression regarded as characteristic of scientists.
excessive belief in the power of scientific knowledge and techniques.