February 14, 2006
SPOON-FED DOGMA (via Robert Schwartz):
Reporters Find Science Journals Harder to Trust, but Not Easy to Verify (JULIE BOSMAN, February 13, 2006, NY Times)
When the journal Science recently retracted two papers by the South Korean researcher Dr. Hwang Woo Suk, it officially confirmed what he had denied for months: Dr. Hwang had fabricated evidence that he had cloned human cells.But the editors of Science were not alone in telling the world of Dr. Hwang's research. Newspapers, wire services and television networks had initially trumpeted the news, as they often do with information served up by the leading scientific journals.
Now news organizations say they are starting to look at the science journals a bit more skeptically.
"My antennae are definitely up since this whole thing unfolded," said Rob Stein, a science reporter for The Washington Post. "I'm reading papers a lot more closely than I had in the past, just to sort of satisfy myself that any individual piece of research is valid. But we're still in sort of the same situation that the journal editors are, which is that if someone wants to completely fabricate data, it's hard to figure that out."
But other than heightened skepticism, not a lot has changed in how newspapers treat scientific journals. Indeed, newspaper editors openly acknowledge their dependence on them.
Having blindly accepted sciencism there's really no point in their questioning the priests. Posted by Orrin Judd at February 14, 2006 7:23 AM
The state of science journals should be a scandal. Details vary by field, but in general far too much is published, and refereeing is often cursory at best. In fields like biochemistry there are literally thousands of journals. The "publish or perish" mentality means that nothing ever gets rejected as unworthy of publication, and the sheer size of the scientific community results in an avalanche of material that no one can possibly keep track of. Given the number of very high profile fraud cases, how many obscure results do you think must be faked?
Posted by: b at February 14, 2006 11:50 AMAnother problem is that "science journalists" are, in general Journalism School graduates, where the only numbers they see are followed by the words "billion dollars" and the last science exposure was that semester they took "Rocks and Stars" and got a C.
