Randy Scheckman has been awarded a 2013 Nobel Prize for medicine. The day before he accepted the prize, he published an
article in the Guardian in which he points to the corruption of science by the false incentivization of scientists by the elite journals, and he specifically calls out the journals Nature, Cell, and Science. Says Scheckman,
"Like fashion designers who create limited-edition handbags or suits, they know scarcity stokes demand, so they artificially restrict the number of papers they accept. The exclusive brands are then marketed with a gimmick called "impact factor" – a score for each journal, measuring the number of times its papers are cited by subsequent research. Better papers, the theory goes, are cited more often, so better journals boast higher scores. Yet it is a deeply flawed measure, pursuing which has become an end in itself – and is as damaging to science as the bonus culture is to banking.
"It is common, and encouraged by many journals, for research to be judged by the impact factor of the journal that publishes it. But as a journal's score is an average, it says little about the quality of any individual piece of research. What is more, citation is sometimes, but not always, linked to quality. A paper can become highly cited because it is good science – or because it is eye-catching, provocative or wrong. Luxury-journal editors know this, so they accept papers that will make waves because they explore sexy subjects or make challenging claims. This influences the science that scientists do. It builds bubbles in fashionable fields where researchers can make the bold claims these journals want, while discouraging other important work, such as replication studies.
"In extreme cases, the lure of the luxury journal can encourage the cutting of corners, and contribute to the escalating number of papers that are retracted as flawed or fraudulent. Science alone has recently retracted high-profile papers reporting cloned human embryos, links between littering and violence, and the genetic profiles of centenarians. Perhaps worse, it has not retracted claims that a microbe is able to use arsenic in its DNA instead of phosphorus, despite overwhelming scientific criticism."
Further, Scheckman is directing his lab to boycott such journals, opting for the more open on-line journals:
It is the quality of the science, not the journal's brand, that matters. Most importantly of all, we scientists need to take action. Like many successful researchers, I have published in the big brands, including the papers that won me the Nobel prize for medicine, which I will be honoured to collect tomorrow.. But no longer. I have now committed my lab to avoiding luxury journals, and I encourage others to do likewise.
Science is now big business and is focused on cash to the detriment of objectivity in developing knowledge. Pursuit of the Nobel Prize and its associated perqs is a corruption, as well, as has been found in the field of physics, especially particle physics. And the pursuit of grants affects all fields as has been demonstrated in Climate Science.
3 comments:
Stan,
My own thoughts exactly. That's why in the country I'm living, studying a scientific carrer is a terrible investment, and opted for engineering instead.
One thing is sure nowadays, Engineering where I live sucks, being fed wih the same ninteenth-century mathematics and useless stuff. Science sucks even more, as if milk needs to be skimmier than ever.
What makes me cringe even more, is seeing some PhDs having so many obvious errors to the "lay person".
Just look at this study:
This Site
Do we need to lower the bar any further?
Kind Regards.
yonose,
Your link didn't come through, could you update it?
thanks,
Stan
Stan,
My absence was due to travelling. I will proceed with your request.
The study that was posted in this blog page, says it all about decadence in the good, communal use of science; now it is becoming an ivory tower hailed by secular people with political havens.
I hope these ones work,
Kind Regards.
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