TexasFilly wrote:
Wow, Tollie, that's kind of frightening. I know there is enormous pressure to "publish", but publishing fraudulent stuff that may or does result in actual damage to patients, for example, is horrifying. OTOH, do you think this story is part of the movement to discredit science and bolster the science deniers in "controversies" like climate change?
There may be an element of derogation of science and scientists in the report referenced by the Wall Street Journal. However, this report of rising retractions is consistent with what the scientific integrity office of the National Institutes of Health has been saying for years. It has also been the experience on too many university campuses. We had it ourselves, leading to the abolition of an entire research institute.
Cheating is found among those who are no longer under intense pressure to publish, i.e., the tenured faculty. At least in the biological sciences, there is another intense pressure: to make money off of a discovery that can be patented.
Part of the explanation may be that we are simply better at detecting errors and fraud. We may also be more alert to its likelihood. The sordid story of Andrew Wakefield and the MMR vaccine is very much on scientists' minds.
There is a serious problem: there is little or no reward for uncovering an error or fraud. In fact, whistleblowers have been shunned by their colleagues, particularly when their discovery destroyed a career. Very early in my career, I published a letter to the editor of a scientific journal in which I pointed out that the results reported in an article by a leading researcher were mathematically impossible. (Hektor will understand that if A is correlated with B, and B is correlated with C, then the correlation between A and C is bounded, the more so the stronger the correlations.) For some inexplicable reason, I ended up being hired in the department where that researcher still taught. That may have been evidence of honesty and honor by the researcher.
A classic recent case was that of Marc Hauser, whose work I had followed with great interest. He is/was an evolutionary biologist who taught in the Psychology Department at FAS, Harvard. His work was primarily with primates and involved the idea that a primitive moral code is embedded in our genes. It is basically a code of fair play, a primitive version of the Golden Rule that is universal to the world's religions.
Hauser had everything: tenure at Harvard, his own laboratory, a continuous flow of grants, the very rare and prestigious National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award, a science medal from the Collège de France, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He was very widely published.
Moral Minds: How Nature Designed Our Universal Sense of Right and Wrong was, for science, a bestseller.
Ironically and tragically, he was accused by his own graduate students of breaches of scientific integrity. Harvard investigated and found him guilty of eight counts of misconduct. His last day at Harvard was August 2, 2011. He had broken the very moral code that he was studying: fair play is fundamental to science.
I believe that Hauser is so convinced of the validity of his findings -- and of their practical importance -- that he tweaked the results to support his theories when necessary. However, I have not and will not see Harvard's internal report of what actually happened. I think Hauser is the first of the 21st century's Sir Cyril Burt's. I also suspect Hauser's findings are true, as Burt's findings are widely believed to be true. You can see evidence of a moral code in your own domestic companions. (This may not always apply to human companions. Some orangutans break the moral code, too.)