like you go to the not-believing-until-seeing convention with lies and what? expect to get away with it?

  • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I used to follow her on Twitter. She’d be constantly berated by some guy in France. Like, dude, if you’re arguing with a buster because she combed through your shit and found louse, you’ve lost twice this game.

    • Cadenza@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Not any guy, our very own Didier Raoult. Unethical, gross, money hoarding, conspirationist and overall public danger Didier Raoult.

  • shoulderoforion@fedia.io
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    3 months ago

    If Scientists don’t publish they do not get grants. Grants it turns out pay their rent, and things like food, and transportation, and kids summer camp. Failure also has a detrimental effect in the attaining of grant monies. There’s a direct line here. For those that choose to go down this road, they do it for as long as they can get away with it, then try to plea bargain.

    • andrewth09@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Its not just the volume of publishing, but the conclusion of the paper if you publish a paper and the result is boring (the X had negligible impact on Y but its inconclusive) you might still put your grant at risk.

      • bob_lemon@feddit.org
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        3 months ago

        This is also the reason why failed experiments hardly ever get published: “We tried X to achieve Y but it did not work because of Z” is very useful information for people also thinking about trying X, but good luck publishing that paper.

        • thevoidzero@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          I’ll repeat it as much as I can but we need yo open up new journals for these kind of things.

          All we need is a good cloud for storage, and volunteers. I think comp-sci people do that with https://arxiv.org/

          The journal should accept any user submitted papers but have ranking based on other people, like successful reproducible studies (which is also accepted in journal) will be linked to the original journal. Reviews and such can be their own articles but also linked to the journal.

          That way, undergrads can do projects reproducing previous studies (given resources) which will still give them research credit. Failures and exploration will also give people credit as it helps other people’s research. We can just tag papers for novel ideas,failures, reproducing old paper,reviews, etc.

          I think it has a chance to be very useful if we can pull it off. Although it’ll have the same problems as of social media with upvote system. So some more thoughts needs to be there for the actual implementation.

    • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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      3 months ago

      Yeah, I’m really not surprised this a more widespread thing. Hell, Wakefield got followers to this day buying his dumb books. Fraud pays

  • bagelberger@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    My father in law (prior to his passing) worked for the National Science Foundation and his job was to investigate grant fraud like this. Apparently it happens all the time.

  • Breve@pawb.social
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    3 months ago

    Money corrupts absolutely everything: science, politics, people…

      • BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        From the outside it’s not obvious how many variables influence scientific research that have absolutely nothing to do with science or the pursuit of knowledge and truth.

        Being scientifically literate is insufficient. We must also be highly sceptical and apply critical thinking to the work of other scientists, particularly when large sums of money are involved and the inevitable conflicts of interest that entails.

        People with money are able to fund research but they will never be scientists because they are only interested in what is true to the extent it will make money.

    • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      This kind of behavior would still exist without money. People would still fake stuff for the clout.

        • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          That’s only because money exists. If you removed money from the equation, clout would be the new currency that everyone lies and cheats for.

            • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              OK, so money corrupts, money exists, everything is corrupt. What’s the point of pointing that out?

          • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            But being caught in a lie would destroy your clout instantly. If they’re competing for clout there would be a big incentive to prove the competition wrong.

            • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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              There is something to that, in that money gained will be kept (unless lawsuits can claw it away for fraud), but with both scenarios the ethically lacking individual would still have enjoyed the time until they were caught and future money/clout would both be hampered.

              As for competition, that sounds the same to me. There is already competition for positions and grants, etc.

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        3 months ago

        That is absolute nonsense. Where does the idea that the nastiest expression of desires is the truest come from? It’s a completely absurd and unverifiable idea.

        People do stuff, putting people in power over others tends to result in the people doing worse stuff. The variable we can tweak here is the power.

        • eatthecake@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Power gives people the freedom to act as they choose, and they choose a lot of nastiness. Does it not make sense that unconstrained choices represent who a person truly is?

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I mean, science doesn’t pay for itself. You need libraries, you need universities, you need equipment. Only a mathematician can get by with a $5 black board and stack of chalk, and even then not very well.

  • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I mean thats pretty out-right fraud, but plenty of scientific fraud is more… idk if I would say nefarious, but certainly as damaging. There is so much pressure to get “certain” results. Its much much more work to detect either intentional or “self-delusioned” statistical fraud. Science is already incredibly difficult when you don’t have the pressure on you to generate specific results.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      In Paleoanthropology these days, you will not find an article about a hominid fossil discovery that doesn’t include some variant of the phrase “forcing Anthropologists to rethink their assumptions”. This all derives from the “Lucy” find that truly did force Anthropologists to rethink their assumptions. Before Lucy, it was assumed that the two most unique aspects of humans - our big brains and our bipedal locomotion - evolved together, but the fact that the 3.9 myo Lucy (since revised to 3.3 myo) was fully bipedal despite having a chimpanzee-sized brain threw this assumption out the window. The career successes of her discoverers and analysts prompted everyone else who finds a bit of thigh bone to make similar claims of significance, despite the fact that no other discovery has had any real earth-shattering significance like that.

      No fraud but just massive overstating of importance.

  • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    “tRuSt tHe sCieNCe!”

    This is a joke of course…well kinda. When science is done well it can change the world. Who would be against that?

    I don’t like the phrase because while the process of science seeks to be as factual and unbiased as possible those in the scientific community are still human. They are fallible, corruptible and can do things for their own personal gain or profit. So to me it could mistakenly misunderstood as “trust science blindly”

    But “Trust the science that is validated by multiple reputable sources” just doesn’t roll off the tongue as nicely

    • borth@sh.itjust.works
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      I agree, that phrase seems to be a little misleading with the “trust in God” crowd because to them, that is the ultimate answer, and no other answer would come close to being “right”. But “trust the science” is not meant to be the ultimate answer, just a sign pointing you in the right direction, so that you can then check the science to see if it’s reliable. So, the science that you’re trusting is not theirs, but yours.

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        you can then check the science

        Me and what degree? Science is so far beyond what I can understand that I would need to spend years of my life studying a single topic to understand a small sliver of science.

        I, and generalizing to we, need to take science on faith as much as anyone in a church. Actually, it’s more on faith than in a church because anyone can pray and see what that results in.

      • kreel@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Academic grants can work in a lot of ways. It is common for a significant chunk to be taken as overhead by the university (20-40%). This is generally smaller for senior members of the faculty who bring in more grants. The PI (primary investigator, read: dude with a reputation) tends to get 5-10% to run the program, and then another 30-40% goes to salaries for researchers working under them (read: grad students). The rest, on the order of 20%, goes to capital costs like materials, time on expensive machines, or prototypes.

        So this guy probably got paid $1-2M directly for the grants over maybe 3-5 years. Note I haven’t looked into his specific situation.

  • smeg@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    That photo of Richard Eckert looks like the Leo reaction image; like he’s thinking ‘Oh my God I can’t believe they’re still buying this shit!’

    • nepenthes@lemmy.world
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      I thought that so much I took a screen to post to comments. I’m glad I found your comment here. His expression is part smug, part guilt, part wainker.

      smug/guilty looking wainker

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    The thing that gets me is that these people are all really smart. If someone is willing to lie and do math, why not work at an unscrupulous pharma/finance company? They’d make way more money and do way less work. I’d even argue that fraud in the private sector is less unethical - if investors give money to a fraud they deserve to lose it, and regulators take an adversarial stance and have whole orgs (in theory) policing fraud like the SEC and FDA.

    It takes a really particular kind of scumbag to seek a position of public trust, make a bunch of trainees financially and professionally dependent on them, accept taxpayer money intended to help cancer patients, then commit fraud.

    • NaevaTheRat [she/her]@vegantheoryclub.org
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      Very few people start with big transgressions. Usually stuff escalates.

      It’s why need systems that don’t put humans in situations where bad behaviour is incentivised. Also why we need to be forgiving when someone comes forward with a small transgression, so people don’t get stuck in escalating cycles.

      I’m sure this guy did some solid research once upon a time.

    • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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      I don’t know about this specific case, but it’s common for the big name researchers not to do any actual research or play any direct part in generating their images. That’s often done by kids - 25 year old grad students, even 20 year old undergrads - or other trainees. Those people may not appreciate how easy it is to detect image manipulation and are still learning what kinds of ‘refining’ of imagery and datasets is acceptable, while the PI that pays their stipend or sponsors their visa rages at their inability to get an expected outcome or replicate a previous result.

      Not saying there aren’t people out there just flat-out frauding, but these are group projects with a structure of trust and pressure that can muddy assignment of culpability. Like any committee or corporate action, it can be tough to say that any one individual is the guilty party or which people where just going along with the group.

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    It’s not just science, although science plays a role in every field. It’s everywhere, and why we’ve reached market saturation with mediocrity, in every field, every business. Those who would exceed mediocrity are ostracized and othered as if excellence is a bad thing, unless they are willing to compromise in other, not public-facing areas.

    • Zoboomafoo@slrpnk.net
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      we’ve reached market saturation with mediocrity

      You’re only saying that because our society has decided that being average is bad, and being below average is unacceptable.

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    3 months ago

    The amount of grands they get is enough to understand how one might be inclined to continue/prolong the research project they are doing. On the other hand there is the sunk cost fallacy. They spend all this time and effort on a research subject basically staking their whole carriers on it being right or giving results and they can’t give up. I’m guessing most is doing it because of the sunk cost fallacy.