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The "science police"?Hi everyone, I'm new to this group, but I had an idea that I would like
some feedback on. The recent headlines have been littered with scientists getting caught publishing falsified data. Ranging from clinical studies where doctors contrive entire data sets, to the more significant reports coming in from South Korea regarding human stem cell cloning. Japanese students recently exposed a professor who studied RNAi, and found evidence that his data was falsified as well. These stories got me to thinking -- who is monitoring science? The American public is already wary of science, and scientific 'public relations' is lacking. The current administration in the White House is not pro-science, and has been accused of using research findings out of context for political gain. And now that word is spreading that scientists frequently fabricate data, well, the overall trend do not look good. The peer review process, in an ideal world, works. Unfortunately, many researchers are so busy running their labs, worrying about grant deadlines and paper submissions, that the peer review process may not work as well as it should. In addition, most research publications include data from experiments that, for the most part, will likely never be repeated again under the precise conditions they were done originally. The exceptions to this are limited to those performing research that depends directly on the success of these previous experiments. Many research findings are thus taken on 'faith' in a way. Most of the time, this works amazingly well; recent advances in molecular biology research have been nothing short of amazing. If something turns out to be incorrect, we have no problem publishing counter claims or corrections. Most scientists are honest about their work, and let their egos take a backseat to the truth. It's the few that do not that gives the system problems. It might be time for the creation of an independent entity that investigates such situations. A sort of "science" police. The quality of research, and public opinion, must not be allowed to continue along its current downward spiral; the vast majority of research funding is through government programs -- funding that is in part related to public opinion. I for one would be interested in a sort of 'detective' job that pertains to this kind of situation. At the very least, I would like to get the ball rolling on this topic, and hear from people who are much more knowledgable than myself. What do people think? _______________________________________________ Wantjob mailing list Wantjob@... http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/wantjob |
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