▲ | jl6 a day ago | |||||||||||||
It would be interesting for reproducibility efforts to assess “consequentiality” of failed replications, meaning: how much does it matter that a particular study wasn’t reproducible? Was it a niche study that nobody cited anyway, or was it a pivotal result that many other publications depended on, or anything in between those two extremes? I would like to think that the truly important papers receive some sort of additional validation before people start to build lives and livelihoods on them, but I’ve also seen some pretty awful citation chains where an initial weak result gets overegged by downstream papers which drop mention of its limitations. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | 0cf8612b2e1e 21 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
It is an ongoing crisis how much Alzheimer’s research was built on faked amyloid beta data. Potentially billions of dollars from public and private research which might have been spent elsewhere had a competing theory not been overshadowed by the initial fictitious results. | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | SoftTalker 15 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Those studies were all run and paid for, many/most with public funding. Of course it matters. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | SonOfLilit 12 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Reproducing a paper is Hard, and also Expensive. I'd expect that they wouldn't pick papers to try and reproduce at random. |