▲ | jraph a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I was never not convinced Ok. > There is no reason to not publish your "failing" studies. That's literally why the public internet was created You are suggesting researchers should blog about their null results? It seems to me the null results deserve the same route as any other paper, with peer reviews, etc. It matters, because this route is what other researchers trust. They wouldn't base their work on some non reviewed blog article that can barely be cited. You don't even base good science on some random article on Arxiv that was not published in some recognized avenue. If you are using some existing work to skip an experiment because it tells you "we've already tried this, it didn't show any effect", you want to be able to trust it like any other work. Hell, as a random citizen in a random discussion, especially one with a PhD, I don't want to be citing a blog article as established scientific knowledge. And yes, getting published in a proper, peer reviewed avenue is work, but we all need to deeply internalize that it's not lesser work if the result is null. > Unless you are going to start putting guns to people's backs, what are you expecting? If researchers collectively decide it's worth pursuing, it's all about creating the incentives at the right place. Like any other research, you could be rewarded, recognized and all. High impact journals and conferences could encourage researchers to publish / present their null results. Of course, we are not speaking about such things like "what two unrelated things could I try to measure to find some absence of correlation", we are speaking about "I think those two things are linked, let's make an experiment. Oh, no, they are not correlated in the end!" -> the experiment is done either way, just that the results also deserve to be published either way. And the experiment should only be published if it doesn't exhibit a fatal flaw or something, we are not talking about flawed experiment either. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | 9rx a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> You are suggesting researchers should blog about their null results? If they want to. Especially if it doesn't meet the standard for the publication system, why not? > It seems to me the null results deserve the same route as any other paper, with peer reviews, etc. If it ranks with the best of them, it is deserving. There isn't room for everything, though, just as there isn't room for everyone who has ever played baseball to join the MLB. That would defeat the entire purpose of what these venues offer. But that doesn't mean you can't play. Anyone who wants to play baseball can do so, just as anyone who wants to publish research can do so. > If researchers collectively decide it's worth pursuing It only takes an individual. Unlike baseball, you can actually play publishing research all by yourself! 1. Where do we read your failed research? Given your stance, it would look very foolish to find out that you haven't published it. 2. Do you draw a line? Like, if you add a pinch more salt to your dinner and found that it doesn't taste any better, do you publish that research? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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