Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

March 16, 2014

Metaphysicians

Filed under: Science — Patrick Durusau @ 7:50 pm

Metaphysicians: Sloppy researchers beware. A new institute has you in its sights

From the post:

“WHY most published research findings are false” is not, as the title of an academic paper, likely to win friends in the ivory tower. But it has certainly influenced people (including journalists at The Economist). The paper it introduced was published in 2005 by John Ioannidis, an epidemiologist who was then at the University of Ioannina, in Greece, and is now at Stanford. It exposed the ways, most notably the overinterpreting of statistical significance in studies with small sample sizes, that scientific findings can end up being irreproducible—or, as a layman might put it, wrong.

Dr Ioannidis has been waging war on sloppy science ever since, helping to develop a discipline called meta-research (ie, research about research). Later this month that battle will be institutionalised, with the launch of the Meta-Research Innovation Centre at Stanford.

METRICS, as the new laboratory is to be known for short, will connect enthusiasts of the nascent field in such corners of academia as medicine, statistics and epidemiology, with the aim of solidifying the young discipline. Dr Ioannidis and the lab’s co-founder, Steven Goodman, will (for this is, after all, science) organise conferences at which acolytes can meet in the world of atoms, rather than just online. They will create a “journal watch” to monitor scientific publishers’ work and to shame laggards into better behaviour. And they will spread the message to policymakers, governments and other interested parties, in an effort to stop them making decisions on the basis of flaky studies. All this in the name of the centre’s nerdishly valiant mission statement: “Identifying and minimising persistent threats to medical-research quality.”

Someone after my own heart! 😉

I spent a large portion of today proofing standards drafts and the only RFC that was cited correctly was one that I wrote for the template they were using. (Hence the low blogging output for today.)

It really isn’t that difficult to check references, to not cite obsoleted materials, to cite relevant materials, etc.

Or, at least I don’t think that it is.

You?

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