Research
An article in this morning’s The Times has reported how errors can affect the findings in scientific studies. Attention to detail is vital, or results are skewed.
Sholto David is a British scientist and blogger with a PhD in cellular and molecular biology. He has achieved recognition for discovering flaws in more than 2,000 studies. Errors have appeared in published papers from universities including Oxford, Cambridge, and Stanford.
Separately, Dr David pointed out anomalies in thirty papers published by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI). DFCI is a cancer treatment and research centre in Boston, Massachusetts, reputed to be the sixth best cancer hospital in the US.
Sholto David received more than $2.5 million, or 17.5% of the $15 million the institute paid against allegations of violating the False Claims Act (fraud) between 2014 and 2024.
We are told to trust the science but science seems to be an imperfect science in the hands of humans. People such Dr David are very important.
ReplyDeleteThe lesson is always to check. One expects scientists to be rigorous,
DeleteSome morning news is always interesting, whether we believe it is a question. Have a nice day!
ReplyDeleteAlways question.
DeleteIn other words, read everything with your brain in gear and check the sources?
ReplyDeleteQuite so.
DeleteGood on Sholto David for investigating the truth behind statistics that are not always as solid and reliable as they are purported to be. Did you know that 99% of Berkshire housewives prefer men who wear string vests and white Y-fronts? Trump is often spewing out statistics that have no basis in reality.
ReplyDeleteWe're not all looking for Pater Mandelson look-alikes.
Delete*Peter*
DeleteCases like this are a reminder that scientific progress depends not only on groundbreaking discoveries but also on rigorous scrutiny, transparency, and the willingness to challenge findings when the evidence does not stand up to careful examination.
ReplyDeleteExactly so.
DeleteAnd this is exactly why I'm always a bit skeptical of everything I hear or read.
ReplyDeleteVery wise.
DeleteSome people have minds for details. I am not one of those so blessed.
ReplyDeleteScientists should be on top of details, always.
DeleteWe need more Dr. Davids. Badly. Soon we will need a whole army of people to check AI.
ReplyDeleteThat is so true.
DeleteEverything needs to be checked and rechecked these days.
ReplyDeleteIt always needs to be the case when scientific research is involved.
DeleteI think you changed your display? Sorry, I can't read white on dark, the dazzle makes it too hard.
ReplyDeleteApologies.
DeleteI hope Dr David has good security, at home but especially at work.
ReplyDelete😃
ReplyDeleteAnd here's me thinking I'm "the only one" (of course I am not!) to notice when an author gets a minor detail wrong such as in my latest read!
ReplyDeleteIt hardly matters in a novel but it can make a huge difference in a scientific paper. Always, always, always have important stuff checked and proof-read by someone else - you own eyes will only see what they already know to expect, not noticing the typos and other errors.
When I sometimes go back to look at post on my own blog, or even just a comment I have left on someone else's blog, I often find typos that of course I didn't notice when I made them; otherwise I would have corrected them before pressing "PUBLISH".
And sure enough, I wrote "you own eyes" instead of "your own eyes" and "post on my own blog" instead of "posts on my own blog"...
DeleteQuod erat demonstrandum, or something like that.