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Sign up to find more cool stuff to followMassive Fraud Uncovered in Work by Social Psychologist
scientificamerican.comScientific fraud always bothers me because I think that in society scientists are held in high regard and are supposed to be above something as demeaning and petty as fraud. I know I expect more from scientists. However, the reality is that scientists are people too and the pressure to publish, publish, publish is extremely strong and wearing. That is of course no excuse for fraud, but you can see how it happens. I hate it though because it forces one to realize that scientists are human like the rest of us.
Scientific American has this pesky habit of moving things behind their paywall so I think I will copy and past the full article for your enjoyment:
“Massive Fraud Uncovered in Work by Social Psychologist
Investigation claims dozens of social-psychology papers contain faked data.
November 1, 2011
By Ewen Callaway of Nature magazine
When colleagues called the work of Dutch psychologist Diederik Stapel too good to be true, they meant it as a compliment. But a preliminary investigative report (go.nature.com/tqmp5c) released on October 31 gives literal meaning to the phrase, detailing years of data manipulation and blatant fabrication by the prominent Tilburg University researcher.
“We have some 30 papers in peer-reviewed journals where we are actually sure that they are fake, and there are more to come,” says Pim Levelt, chair of the committee that investigated Stapel’s work at the university.
Stapel’s eye-catching studies on aspects of social behaviour such as power and stereotyping garnered wide press coverage. For example, in a recent Science paper (which the investigation has not identified as fraudulent), Stapel reported that untidy environments encouraged discrimination ( Science 332, 251-253; 2011).
“Somebody used the word ‘wunderkind’,” says Miles Hewstone, a social psychologist at the University of Oxford, UK. “He was one of the bright thrusting young stars of Dutch social psychology — highly published, highly cited, prize-winning, worked with lots of people, and very well thought of in the field.”
In early September, however, Stapel was suspended from his position as dean of the Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral Sciences over suspicions of research fraud. In late August, three young researchers under Stapel’s supervision had found irregularities in published data and notified the head of the social-psychology department, Marcel Zeelenberg. Levelt’s committee joined up with sister committees at the universities of Groningen and Amsterdam, where Stapel has also worked, to produce the report. They are now combing through his publications and their supporting data, and interviewing collaborators, to map out the full extent of the misconduct.
Mistakes made
Stapel initially cooperated with the investigation by identifying fraudulent publications, but stopped because he said he was not physically or emotionally able to continue, says Levelt. In a statement, translated from Dutch, that is appended to the report, Stapel says: “I have made mistakes, but I was and am honestly concerned with the field of social psychology. I therefore regret the pain that I have caused others.” Nature was unable to contact Stapel for comment.
The report does not identify specific papers that contain manipulated or fabricated data, pending the completion of the investigations. The investigators conclude, though, that Stapel acted alone. “The co-authors, and in particular the PhD students, were absolutely not involved, they really didn’t know what was going on in this data fabrication,” Levelt says.
Often, the report says, Stapel and a colleague or student came up with a hypothesis, and then designed an experiment to test it. Stapel took responsibility for collecting data through what he said was a network of contacts at other institutions, and several weeks later produced a fictitious data file for his colleague to write up into a paper. On other occasions, Stapel received co-authorship after producing data he claimed to have collected previously that exactly matched the needs of a colleague working on a particular study.
The data were also suspicious, the report says: effects were large; missing data and outliers were rare; and hypotheses were rarely refuted. Journals publishing Stapel’s papers did not question the omission of details about where the data came from. “We see that the scientific checks and balances process has failed at several levels,” Levelt says.
At a press conference, Tilburg University’s rector, Philip Eijlander, said that he would pursue criminal prosecution of Stapel. The committee is also producing a list of tainted papers to guide co-authors and journal publishers in what will probably be a long list of retractions.
Joris Lammers, a psychologist at Tilburg who did his PhD under Stapel’s supervision, says he is “shocked” by the findings. Lammers says he worked independently of Stapel and collected all the data in his PhD himself—the report notes that his dissertation is not under suspicion. Several other former collaborators contacted by Nature declined to comment.
Hewstone, who has never worked with Stapel, had initially fretted that Stapel’s fraudulent oeuvre would undermine other findings in the field of social psychology. While editing a new edition of a social-psychology textbook, however, Hewstone turned up no references to Stapel’s work in 15 chapters, suggesting that Stapel’s work was not as influential as he had thought. “I think the impact is going to be particularly devastating for the young people he worked with, but not for the field of social psychology as such,” he says.
This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on November 1, 2011.”
Blogs @ Scientific American
My video was just featured on Hannah Water’s blog for the Scientific American website!
A Hilarious Behind-the-Scenes Tour of Montana’s Natural History Museum
By Hannah Waters | January 15, 2013
The University of Montana’s natural history museum in Missoula is the “largest zoological museum in Montana and one of the major zoological collections of the Northern Rocky Mountains,” according to its website. Its collections hold 14,500 mammalian specimens, 7,000 birds, 3,200 fish, and 320 reptiles and amphibians. However, it’s different than the typical ideal of a natural history museum: unlike the one that employs me (the Smithsonian), it is primarily a research facility and not a place where a vacationing family would devote a day to wandering through a maze of exhibits on multiple floors.
Another thing that makes it stand out: Montana’s Philip L. Wright Zoological Museum only has two staff members.
Lucky for the museum, one of those staff members is Emily Graslie. Graslie first entered the museum to complete an independent study credit for her studio art major and never left. Now she is a volunteer curatorial assistant (you read that right: the museum’s only full-time staff member is a VOLUNTEER) while working on her masters in museum studies.
Graslie doesn’t just want to bury her face in bones and skins: she’s an articulate and hilarious educator. She just launched the first episode of The Brain Scoop, a new video series going behind-the-scenes at the museum. It’s witty and educational and wonderfully produced–and, like most things at their museum, runs on volunteered passion.
Watch the video to see many skulls and bones, learn about how animals are prepared for the museum, and find the best place to watch an orgy on campus.
See the article HERE
Not going to lie, I burst into tears when I read this. I might be a new novelty to some of you guys, but believe me — I have been working so stupidly hard at publicizing this place for the last two years, so seeing it written about on a blog for Scientific American is like the world coming down and giving me a big pat on the back. I am so incredibly thankful for all of you.
Lessons from Sherlock Holmes: How do you kill your hero?
blogs.scientificamerican.com“Oh SHERLOCK, SHERLOCK, he’s in town again,
That prince of perspicacity, that monument of brain.
It seems he wasn’t hurt at all
By tumbling down the waterfall.”
So went the ditty that P.G. Wodehouse published in 1903, upon Holmes’s miraculous resurrection from his deadly descent down the Reichenbach Falls. This return from the dead was a momentous event indeed, and well worth Wodehouse’s commemoration: when Arthur Conan Doyle had killed off his famous detective almost ten years earlier, in “The Final Problem,” the news was, to put it mildly, not well received. The Strand—for many years, Holmes’s home—was inundated with letters from jilted readers. Conan Doyle found himself the target of angry mail and vitriolic attacks. It’s even said that City of London clerks wore black armbands to mourn the detective’s passing.
Still, Holmes’s creator stood firm. Holmes was gone for good. “Killed Holmes,” he wrote simply in his diary the December that “The Final Problem” appeared in the Strand Magazine. And Holmes would not be back.
But in the end, despite all his reservations, Conan Doyle succumbed. The pressure was just too great. And so, Sherlock Holmes was born anew. It may not have been the most graceful of returns—as Wodehouse wrote, “The explanation may be thin”—but you know what? Nobody much cared. Just as long as their hero was once again alive, any explanation, however vague on detail, would do. (“But bless you! We don’t care a pin, / If he’ll just give us back our SHERLOCK,” continues Wodehouse’s poem.)
Arthur Conan Doyle had learned a valuable lesson: you cannot kill Sherlock Holmes. It simply isn’t done.
Can Algae Feed the World and Fuel the Planet? A Q&A with Craig Venter
scientificamerican.comThe geneticist and entrepreneur hopes to use synthetic biology to transform microscopic algae into cells that eat up carbon dioxide, spit out oil and provide meals