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Vegas
09-14-2007, 05:30 PM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118972683557627104.html?mod=hps_us_editors_picks

We all make mistakes and, if you believe medical scholar John Ioannidis, scientists make more than their fair share. By his calculations, most published research findings are wrong.

Dr. Ioannidis is an epidemiologist who studies research methods at the University of Ioannina School of Medicine in Greece and Tufts University in Medford, Mass. In a series of influential analytical reports, he has documented how, in thousands of peer-reviewed research papers published every year, there may be so much less than meets the eye.
These flawed findings, for the most part, stem not from fraud or formal misconduct, but from more mundane misbehavior: miscalculation, poor study design or self-serving data analysis. "There is an increasing concern that in modern research, false findings may be the majority or even the vast majority of published research claims," Dr. Ioannidis said. "A new claim about a research finding is more likely to be false than true."

The hotter the field of research the more likely its published findings should be viewed skeptically, he determined.

Take the discovery that the risk of disease may vary between men and women, depending on their genes. Studies have prominently reported such sex differences for hypertension, schizophrenia and multiple sclerosis, as well as lung cancer and heart attacks. In research published last month in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. Ioannidis and his colleagues analyzed 432 published research claims concerning gender and genes.
Upon closer scrutiny, almost none of them held up. Only one was replicated.

Statistically speaking, science suffers from an excess of significance. Overeager researchers often tinker too much with the statistical variables of their analysis to coax any meaningful insight from their data sets. "People are messing around with the data to find anything that seems significant, to show they have found something that is new and unusual," Dr. Ioannidis said.

In the U. S., research is a $55-billion-a-year enterprise that stakes its credibility on the reliability of evidence and the work of Dr. Ioannidis strikes a raw nerve. In fact, his 2005 essay "Why Most Published Research Findings Are False" remains the most downloaded technical paper that the journal PLoS Medicine has ever published.

"He has done systematic looks at the published literature and empirically shown us what we know deep inside our hearts," said Muin Khoury, director of the National Office of Public Health Genomics at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "We need to pay more attention to the replication of published scientific results."

Every new fact discovered through experiment represents a foothold in the unknown. In a wilderness of knowledge, it can be difficult to distinguish error from fraud, sloppiness from deception, eagerness from greed or, increasingly, scientific conviction from partisan passion. As scientific findings become fodder for political policy wars over matters from stem-cell research to global warming, even trivial errors and corrections can have larger consequences.

Still, other researchers warn not to fear all mistakes. Error is as much a part of science as discovery. It is the inevitable byproduct of a search for truth that must proceed by trial and error. "Where you have new areas of knowledge developing, then the science is going to be disputed, subject to errors arising from inadequate data or the failure to recognize new matters," said Yale University science historian Daniel Kevles. Conflicting data and differences of interpretation are common.

To root out mistakes, scientists rely on each other to be vigilant. Even so, findings too rarely are checked by others or independently replicated. Retractions, while more common, are still relatively infrequent. Findings that have been refuted can linger in the scientific literature for years to be cited unwittingly by other researchers, compounding the errors.

Stung by frauds in physics, biology and medicine, research journals recently adopted more stringent safeguards to protect at least against deliberate fabrication of data. But it is hard to admit even honest error. Last month, the Chinese government proposed a new law to allow its scientists to admit failures without penalty. Next week, the first world conference on research integrity convenes in Lisbon.

Overall, technical reviewers are hard-pressed to detect every anomaly. On average, researchers submit about 12,000 papers annually just to the weekly peer-reviewed journal Science. Last year, four papers in Science were retracted. A dozen others were corrected.

No one actually knows how many incorrect research reports remain unchallenged.

Earlier this year, informatics expert Murat Cokol and his colleagues at Columbia University sorted through 9.4 million research papers at the U.S. National Library of Medicine published from 1950 through 2004 in 4,000 journals. By raw count, just 596 had been formally retracted, Dr. Cokol reported.

"The correction isn't the ultimate truth either," Prof. Kevles said.

Hotpapa666
09-14-2007, 08:06 PM
It is kinda funny to see an epidemiologist, given the VERY loose statistical methods they use, critisizing (sp) the statistical practises of other branches of science.

On to the science: As our ideas about the natural world become more and more refined, the questions asked and answered become more and more specific AND more and more difficult. An example: If I ask the question "does the Earth orbit the sun?", I can look up to the sky, make observation, and, say "Yes". There isn't much arguing, there isn't any wiggle room. If I ask the question "Does protein X interact with receptor Y on the surface of a cell to produce effect Z?" and I come to the conclusion, based on my studies, "Yes, X causes effect Z through Y". If it comes out 6 months later that protein x needs cofactor W and ion E to interact receptor Y, I was techinically wrong: X+Y=Z isn't 'technically' correct, it's more like (X+W+E)+Y=Z...

It happens all the time. The good thing about science is it's ability to adapt to new techniques and knowledge and always get things a little bit better. Science isn't about absolutes.

MTVike
09-14-2007, 08:39 PM
Often, "science" is about money in this day and age.

It certainly is in psychiatry, where studies attempt to establish the idea of chemical imbalance in the brain with specific mental disorders. So we prescribe drugs to correct this "imbalance".

Considering the complexity of the brain, it's like using a hammer to smash an ant. It works, but at what price?

Many people are screwed up because their formative years were impacted by lack of attachment, abuse, chaos.

"Science" wants to tell us these kids have chemical brain imbalances. Take these drugs to correct such imbalance. Yeah.

Make the family feel better because there's an identified patient. Makes the doctor feel better because it's a 15-minute office visit and a 5-second note on the prescription pad. Makes the drug companies feel better because...well, you know.

Insurance companies? They've figured out that allowing the medical model to take over mental health is actually cheaper in the long run. Certainly much cheaper than paying for individual or family ("gasp" what's that?)counseling.

But medical science stands ready to back up this treatment.