The scientist who faked over 50 studies

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 834

  • @PeteJudo1
    @PeteJudo1  Год назад +265

    Thanks for watching guys. The deeper I look into the academic discipline, the more broken parts I find. So will be talking more about this in future.
    But this is not all I am passionate about. Behavioural science has a lot of good scientists and really interesting ideas. So videos on both the good and bad in the future.

    • @damulle
      @damulle Год назад +3

      Thanks man. Love your videos.
      Would love to hear your thoughts on the recent story with the climate scientist Patrick T Brown titled "I Left Out the Full Truth to Get My Climate Change Paper Published".

    • @adaninurs
      @adaninurs Год назад +2

      I totally agree that there are LOTS of good scientists and interesting ideas out there. But I think the issue is that most people nowadays see science as a "truth," not "way to find the truth." So videos like this are VERY needed! But as a fellow nerd, I strongly agree too, to post both good and bad :)

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад

      ​@@damullethe author is making big statements out of thin air. He quote "didn’t bother to study the influence of these other obviously relevant factors" to make a review (according to his own opinion) easier. And then after leaving academia he suggests that he could cover other factors better. First, it is his fault. A lot of great papers cover all different reasons for climate change from change in solar activity to volcanoes to show anthropogenic contribution. Second, he didn't even try to submit a paper "not following the trend" so he had zero proof, as experiments cannot be done like that.

    • @2021philyou
      @2021philyou Год назад +1

      the real problem is Peer Reviewing. Especially for experimental science. In the vast majority of papers, peer reviewing cannot be done for cognitive and time limits. It follows that scientific publications are not validated in any way. And together with ranking of research, of university, etc are just a tool of academic power.

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад

      @@2021philyou and what do you suggest to use for study validation instead of peer review?
      Most scientific papers in decent journals are validated by checking methodology and, if applicable, how close the results are described by existing laws and previous publications. And 1% of cheaters are going to exist all the time.

  • @schildkroete
    @schildkroete Год назад +979

    Yeesh, when your PhD adviser has you write up your thesis using their own data that they provide for you instead of having you develop your own hypothesis, methodology, and collected set of data, you know that's a huge red flag!

    • @OptimalOwl
      @OptimalOwl Год назад +97

      Except if you haven't worked with a PhD advisor before. Then you might not realize how strange that is.

    • @wj5643
      @wj5643 Год назад +20

      It's actually pretty common.

    • @robertewalt7789
      @robertewalt7789 Год назад +32

      The whole point of a PhD program is for students to learn to find data, develop hypotheses, develop methods of testing the hypotheses. Cranking the advisor’s data is not enough.

    • @roxienatura
      @roxienatura Год назад +41

      This varies a lot by discipline. My PhD is in Epi, and it was almost unheard of for any PhD student to collect their own data, since the discipline is more focused on complex methods, analytic design, and utilizing big data (as in tens of thousands of observations, which would be unrealistic for any PhD student's first foray into data collection).

    • @nazgames1524
      @nazgames1524 Год назад +3

      Yet it happens 😔

  • @neurodeee
    @neurodeee Год назад +684

    It scares me how brazen and blatant most publicized cases of study fraud look. Raises the question of whether more sophisticated attempts are truly rare or a halfway intelligent fraudster just never gets caught.

    • @brentedgerton9469
      @brentedgerton9469 Год назад +128

      Im currently an engineering PhD student. I obviously don't commit fraud, but doing so would be trivially easy. I deal with hundreds/thousands of samples and can add/remove them as I please. It's scary to see how easy it is, so I'm sure most fraud is never caught. The biggest preventor of fraud, in my anecdotal experience, is the constant interaction with your advisor who would notice if your bad data suddenly started looking good.

    • @Ethan-iv8fs
      @Ethan-iv8fs Год назад +1

      I agree, it is concerning to consider the possibility

    • @червонадзюбка
      @червонадзюбка Год назад

      ​@@brentedgerton9469depends on if you have a good supervisor or SB who doesn't care about you unless you can put their name on a toilet paper article

    • @JP-lz3vk
      @JP-lz3vk Год назад

      @@brentedgerton9469 Unless your advisor is providing really, really good datasets from his/her imagination....

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад

      @@brentedgerton9469 One may be "lucky" to publish a study based on fake data, but the journey does not end there. A decent study usually includes intercomparison with other results and models, in which fake data is going to fail (maybe in future studies fraud will be revealed). For data to be looking good, one should also understand the laws behind those observations, which is not that common, especially for young scientists. Therefore, sure, it is not hard to present fake data, but why doing so? =)

  • @adaninurs
    @adaninurs Год назад +358

    Videos like this really opened my eyes that I'm not crazy honestly... for my undergraduate thesis, I used someone's paper as a reference... i kept counting and counting but the number was just wrong.... i tried to email them, no answer too. I told my professor and he said "this has been peer reviewed, so yours the one might be wrong, check it again". Like I swear, I count it like 20+ times probably.. :") i ended up using my own calculation for my undergrad thesis but yeah, thanks for making videos like this!!

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +50

      Peer review is not designed to check all numbers (but it is possible). It is designed to check validity of methods used in the paper and adequacy of conclusions made based on the results. If someone's calculations are wrong, well, it's bad, but it can be fixed by reporting the error in future publications or correcting the original paper. Nothing is wrong in making mistakes. Wrong results eventually just won't be cited well.
      In brief, your supervisor is wrong in understanding what a peer review is.

    • @asumazilla
      @asumazilla Год назад +3

      ​@@salganikno his supervisor said his might be wrong, so the student checked many times. Nothing wrong there.

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +33

      @@asumazilla not really. The student checked the results many times before asking his supervisor. And the supervisor recommended checking the results even after claiming that peer review assumes that all numbers were checked. Which is not what peer review is responsible for=)

    • @st3ppenwolf
      @st3ppenwolf Год назад +8

      Most papers have a number of inaccuracies, some of them fundamental. First, there's no reason to think they were all fraudulent, second if you think there's something wrong with a paper you can write to the editor of the journal that published the work. You can handle paper corrections or inaccuracies that way.

    • @pneudmatic
      @pneudmatic Год назад

      Typos happen.

  • @kevinvanhorn2193
    @kevinvanhorn2193 Год назад +311

    Stapel's original sin was trying to *prove* his hypothesis. Instead he should have been trying to *test* it.

    • @spacewater7
      @spacewater7 Год назад +13

      None of the above. He should have been trying to find data to draw a hypothesis from. Anytime you start with a solution and try to work backward, you will end up somewhere that doesn't exist - which is exactly what happened to him.

    • @DrGreerIsRight
      @DrGreerIsRight Год назад +1

      ​@@spacewater7this

    • @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa
      @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa Год назад +15

      Um, spacewater7, do you remember in middle school learning about the scientific method and they would ask you to write a hypothesis first? That's because a hypothesis comes before any testing. It's not a hypothesis if you're looking at the data already gathered, then it's a conclusion.

    • @forallthestupidshit3550
      @forallthestupidshit3550 Год назад

      No one in academia is ever trying to prove anything. Theories cannot be proven in science, they can only disproven. Academics try to theorize something based on data. No one is trying to prove anything, except religious people; they are pretty driven to prove their book correct.

    • @spacewater7
      @spacewater7 Год назад

      @@duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa Apparently your education was rather tainted with Newthought? Explains a lot of what's wrong with 'science' these days. Speaking of Newspeak, Science is now considered a proper noun apparently, and people can identify as it, or change in and out of it, like a gender, or a lab coat. Fascinating! But perhaps you and your unfortunate classmates should study some Greek philosophy, to unwash your mind?
      Thanks for bringing up this excellent example of how things became the way they are going. Remember though, just because you see something on TV, or read it in a newspaper, or even a textbook - it doesn't mean that it's true.

  • @adrianhenle
    @adrianhenle Год назад +217

    In the US, every research institution is required to have a Research Integrity Officer, who is the *only* person you should go to with suspicions of academic fraud. Bringing it up with the suspected person just gives them a chance to cover their ass or throw someone else under the bus.

    • @mikebaker2436
      @mikebaker2436 Год назад +45

      In the US, there have been cases of the institution then going straight to the accused warning them anyway about the impending investigation and investigating committee members having conflicts of interest (example: the initial investigation into Eric Stewart by FSU.)

    • @mignonhagemeijer3726
      @mignonhagemeijer3726 Год назад +17

      We have that in the Netherlands as well. Unfortunately these things are no garantees.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад +17

      meaningless in crony networks. also such officers more and more rarely have any academic background.

    • @doctorlolchicken7478
      @doctorlolchicken7478 Год назад +41

      That’s like saying “Take your problem straight to HR” - who can then work with management and legal to limit the damage to the institution, including just covering things up.

    • @liordagan9342
      @liordagan9342 Год назад

      See response of doctorlolchicken. Any internal board is likely to act as a coverup. Just look at what happened with Stanford University last president. Or almost all others in this channel. Or to all those who accepted hoax papers in the grievance studies. Nothing.

  • @kevinvanhorn2193
    @kevinvanhorn2193 Год назад +201

    This is what happens when nobody bothers trying to replicate previous studies, an essential part of the scientific method. General rule of thumb: it's not real until it replicates.

    • @WilfNelson1
      @WilfNelson1 Год назад +19

      I feel proof of replication with another lab and third party verification of the data analysis needs to be the new standard for publication. It's not going to stop fraud but it will stop fraud like this

    • @kevinvanhorn2193
      @kevinvanhorn2193 Год назад +5

      @@Stevie-J The use of proprietary data and unpublished code is more of a problem.

    • @User_5tjk42gj9
      @User_5tjk42gj9 Год назад +2

      ​@Stevie-J Prepare for the pseudo-intellectuals. They're coming...

    • @LorxusIsAFox
      @LorxusIsAFox Год назад +1

      lol, good luck getting grants or tenure if you focus on replication

    • @kevinvanhorn2193
      @kevinvanhorn2193 Год назад +8

      @@LorxusIsAFox That is the problem.

  • @metalslegend
    @metalslegend Год назад +91

    The huge gray area between 100% correct data processing and transaparency and obvious data fraud is what worries me.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад

      like with bigotry, ignorance is not an excuse for bad data. Incompetence should get you fired too anyways, no?

    • @OptimalOwl
      @OptimalOwl Год назад

      @@jesipohl6717
      But there are metascientific results showing that the average researcher does not understand her own methods and has forgotten about basic first-year statistics concepts. Do you mean to say that we should dramatically cull the herd until only a smaller, more elite sample of scientists remain?
      I would be all for that, because metascience also shows that most papers never get cited and most scientists never contribute anything, except...
      ... Except, who can we count on to perform the culling in an even-handed, meritocracy-maximizing way? Isn't part of the problem that everything from admissions offices to faculties to grants committees and editorial boards put various other concerns ahead of scientific integrity? It's hard to identify any one part of the system that we can really solidly lean on and use as a measuring stick for the rest.

    • @robertbeisert3315
      @robertbeisert3315 Год назад +1

      The obvious answer is to publish all data sets with the discarded data. How we would enforce that is, of course, an exercise for the reader.
      But if you can't check all the data, the paper might as well be hearsay.

    • @metalslegend
      @metalslegend Год назад +2

      ​@@robertbeisert3315 I somewhat agree. I believe that in behavioral sciences, it should be mandatory for researchers to publish the precise data processing and data analysis steps, along with the raw data. I mean the exact steps that were done after extracting the raw data. Easiest option would be to publish the code for R, SPSS, or such, that was used. A lot of scientists work with software where you only have to press around, e.g. Excel to process data. In that way, no one from the outside can trace how you arrived at the final data you analyze and then how you arrived at the results you claim.

    • @forstuffjust7735
      @forstuffjust7735 Год назад +1

      ​@@robertbeisert3315stillbaffles me that for a thesis no one will read you have to give them your data/code, but apparently not if you wosh to publish thus efficting the entire community

  • @mymom1462
    @mymom1462 Год назад +290

    You are slowly turning into the Coffeezilla who covers Academic Fraud. You and that Broccoli guy should team up to make the next big hitpiece doc.
    All in all, thank you for this stuff and for bringing light into an often neglected section of academia. As entertaining as this is, it is important that people become more cognizant of this phenomenon.

    • @spaghettiisyummy.3623
      @spaghettiisyummy.3623 Год назад +7

      YA, TEAM UP WITH BROCCOLI GUY!

    • @damianpos8832
      @damianpos8832 Год назад

      That would be long lasting career..lol

    • @borisstojanovic6646
      @borisstojanovic6646 Год назад

      Yeeeees, this please ⬆️

    • @sup8668
      @sup8668 Год назад

      @@spaghettiisyummy.3623 yesss please

    • @einhalbesbrot
      @einhalbesbrot Год назад +2

      Why? He is just repackaging already published articles?
      Cofeezilla investigates himself

  • @OL9245
    @OL9245 Год назад +85

    I once was a tutor for a group of smart students who wanted advices on how to do some experiments on which I was an expert. But their time and budget was so tiny that in the end the experiment they made had lost relavance. To my great surprise, they ended wit significant results and they got a good grade at their university. When I proposed them to publish their data, they told me they chose to fabricate everything because the raw data were meaningless. I was shocked. They were smart. They were a group, not an individual let alone with his décisions. The pressure on their shoulders was very mild because even with negative results they would have got their degree. Despite all of this they decided to cheat. Cheating when the risk of being coutch is small and the punishment would be mild IS THE PREFERES OPTION of most people. Even the smartest ones.

    • @robertbeisert3315
      @robertbeisert3315 Год назад +25

      Thought about it once. It was an engineering project that couldn't be done - not enough ports to handle the data I/O required. But the only evidence asked for was a video we could totally fake.
      We sided with honesty and failed the major assignment. Passed the class and got the degree, though.

    • @bazstraight8797
      @bazstraight8797 Год назад +13

      One of my Med school friends did this. Two of them sat up all night filling out a few hundred survey forms using a variety of pens etc.
      I myself did hard science. Through the first 3 years of my degree I always knew what the result of an 'experiment' should be, including what amount and kind of noise to expect in the data so it often got fabricated to speed things along. I actually think it was a good way to learn and helped when I did do my thesis (which involved collecting genuine field data).
      In a similar vein, my favourite school teacher was one who just wrote out notes longhand on a blackboard for us to copy down. It kept the class quiet and efficiently conveyed the required knowledge. When I described this to an Education lecturer he huffed and puffed about 'learning by doing'. The guy had no conception that that knowledge had taken generations of 'learning by doing' to accumulate.

    • @ellag3265
      @ellag3265 Год назад +3

      At least they didn't decide to try to publish it, lol.

    • @williewonka6694
      @williewonka6694 Год назад

      They likely cheat all the time, as the cheating solution came so easily, and without concern or remorse.

    • @notavailable9479
      @notavailable9479 Год назад

      smart, intelligent, genius. these are all just fluid concepts. i have a few defined. but just to clarify, our belief that someone is "smart" is an expectation of them or their "ability", not their actual outcome.

  • @chrisoakey9841
    @chrisoakey9841 Год назад +95

    Thats how abusive personalities survive. They isolate those under them. They acuse others of their crimes, they play the victim's. And only when they know they are cooked do they then admit things and fall back on playing the victim.

  • @dgonL
    @dgonL Год назад +98

    I really wonder how many of these academics have not been caught, because the ones that did get caught, did really stupid stuff. Using the same data set for multiple studies, writing the name of the university instead of the year, getting duplicate numbers of the subjects,... It makes me think that anyone who's just a little bit better at covering their tracks would not be caught.

    • @hope-cat4894
      @hope-cat4894 Год назад

      I'm concerned about how many studies were built off of the fraud studies, and the fake data just kept building up because no one wanted to admit it couldn't be replicated.

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +3

      There are several studies, where researchers were anonymously asked if they ever faked their data. The fraction was around 1%. Of course, it is easy to fake anything including data. But 99% of researchers do their science to find the real unknown answer and to improve their skills. On the most levels having some striking results is not a requirement, no correlation is often just fine.

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +1

      @@markhall2414 there is a fraction of retracted papers (small fraction of percent) and an estimate of researchers fraction who ever cheated (1%). That's what we have. When bad papers are becoming highly cited, there is a good chance to reveal the errors or cheating. There is no proof that this is a systematic problem. And there is a reason why such stories mostly occur in disciplines where it's easy to cheat (behavioural science).

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +1

      @@markhall2414 yes, most probably. That's why the fraction of cheating is so much higher than the fraction of retracted papers. In most of the fields cheating also requires a good understanding of the topic, as one should understand what would be the expected pattern following some physical law.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад +3

      @@markhall2414 this most often happens with data-mining, whenever I read "let the data speak for itself" that's code for, "maybe we did some data mining and tried some analyses and stat-tests till it worked, we didn't correct for multiple tests though, cause the data told us not to..."
      "Data-directed research" is something I am always skeptical of.

  • @Storygospel533
    @Storygospel533 Год назад +312

    This professor's confession is worth more to the study of behavioral science than 60 academic papers

    • @gaylebaker8419
      @gaylebaker8419 Год назад

      Nothing to study. It's just manipulation by a con artist.

    • @BlackSakura33
      @BlackSakura33 Год назад +20

      He is a pure narcissist. He is proud of what he did.

    • @homeless5913
      @homeless5913 Год назад +3

      @@BlackSakura33 What makes you think that?

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting Год назад +5

      @@homeless5913his entire attitude. He proudly states that the data he got from the field didn't match his intended results, THEREFORE faking the results was the right and logical thing to do.

    • @AApron
      @AApron Год назад +12

      ​@@jwentingspot on. This professor blamed people first and now after getting caught, he's being regarded as upfront. What a load of garbage. He's only "upfront" and honest cuz he got caught!

  • @dcentral
    @dcentral Год назад +72

    Wasn’t there something similar in Alzheimers research when one researcher mislead an industry for many years who wasted funds and years trying to find therapies based on this researcher’s findings but later it was found that this researcher’s work could not be replicated and his approach was abandoned.

    • @chicken29843
      @chicken29843 Год назад +4

      Yes I think I remember hearing about this guy.

    • @robertbeisert3315
      @robertbeisert3315 Год назад +1

      He was president of Stanford University and ran several labs. None of his studies were replicated successfully, and whistle-blowers exposed the outright fraud.
      Billions of dollars in research were based on his lies, and he skated with a golden parachute.

    • @ulforcemegamon3094
      @ulforcemegamon3094 Год назад +23

      Yup , and to make matters worse his papers was one of the most cited papers *ever* , so easily billions (if not more ) in research went to trash in less than a week

    • @alistair6914
      @alistair6914 Год назад +1

      Yes no brain plaque

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 10 месяцев назад +3

      That’s an atrocity, speaking as someone who has had a beloved family member afflicted with this dread disease. Consequences like that to public health really ought to merit criminal penalties. It’s worse than murdering a person, because millions could be harmed by his actions. I’m speaking hypothetically, though, only knowing what you just recounted.

  • @rjr230
    @rjr230 Год назад +39

    I just finished reading “Science Fictions” by Stuart Ritchie, and Diederik makes an appearance. It’s a great book that goes into a lot of depth about these kinds of issues. The academic and publishing culture and incentives take center stage in his critique, I think you’d really like the book. Ritchie is also a psychologist, and many of the examples he draws come from his field.

  • @timhowell6929
    @timhowell6929 Год назад +14

    Ok so one problem that I see is “getting your data from the advisor”. As a PhD student myself I would NEVER accept any data from a professor. There are valid and reliable online data
    sources like ESS, but the purpose of getting a PhD is to experience the whole process from setting up studies, taking measurements, analyzing the data and writing the dissertation.

  • @loodwich
    @loodwich Год назад +15

    I just finished a paper on a VR (Virtual Reality) experience that I use to teach radioactivity at university, I found that the tool works and is quicker to tell the facts... but several side studies are inconsistent... I didn't find if playing video games had an effect on the information that they took from the VR experience. I checked several improvements and looked if they play video games or not, and I found... inconsistencies, I couldn't find any relationships... so my original thesis crumbled... I know that the problem is some of the students that I give the questionaries don't understand the questions... because after talking with those students, I started to recognize a pattern: the students that increase higher their grades are the ones that read more books, but a few personal interviews are not data... so now I am improving the VR experience, to make new questionaries, to test on students in several universities...
    So, I don't know why some people want to have exceptional results in every paper, I want to continue the research and make a better approach every time.

    • @TNT-km2eg
      @TNT-km2eg 6 месяцев назад

      So , so , so ...

  • @lesath7883
    @lesath7883 Год назад +19

    For the most basic ergonomics diagnosis at an office, my undergrar team had to fill oit individual sheets and record videos of over 50 employees.
    10 years later, I still have those cards inside a box in my room.
    It is ridiculous that a PhD does not have that amount of proof to substantiate his research and people believe it to be an awesome researcher.
    Yes.
    These people get obsessed with finding in the world what they WANT to find.
    That is why I can't trust science anymore.
    Because it predertermines the outcome first, and then invents the data to prove that predetermined outcome.

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Год назад

      The power of science is not one paper... or one results. It is repeating the experiment and using that data. In simple terms trust in the number of citations (ignore self citations).
      That man could get away because he was in a soft science... where there is little interest to repeat his experiment. In biochemistry. if you do X, Y, Z, you get result A. Everyone nods and repeat X, Y, Z because they want to use A for their own work. If they cannot get A, you will soon know about it. And if you cannot guide them to get A, you will find your paper receiving no citations. And it will be buried under obscurity and forgotten.

  • @indigo22284
    @indigo22284 Год назад +37

    He should go to JAIL!! He intentionally STOLE MONEY and COMMITTED FRAUD!!! What the hell?!?! NO!!! Just because he’s “refreshingly honest?!” No he will have real world consequences!!!

    • @seanrrr
      @seanrrr Год назад +16

      I know, I hate how these academic fraud cases are never treated like financial fraud, even though they are often using public funding to carry out this research. I don't see how this is any different than lying to investors about sales/profit, which usually comes with several years of prison.

    • @avenger3163
      @avenger3163 Год назад +6

      Not to mention the potential harm created by spreading falsified information.
      Its impossible to quantify but this person literally set us back years to decades in understanding.
      Beyond selfish.

    • @alistair6914
      @alistair6914 Год назад

      They are trying to lesson the damage to the scientism religion

  • @vaska1999
    @vaska1999 Год назад +150

    Even in his apology, he's lying. Stapel wasn't obsessed with finding an explanation for certain phenomena: he was obsessed with obtaining academic status and research funds. The guy's a typical sociopath.

    • @courier6960
      @courier6960 Год назад +25

      I wouldn’t say it’s sociopathic, just a simple reality of research that’s very much present and needs to be acknowledged. This kind of stuff if why I got kind of annoyed with all of the sociology courses I took as a minor in college while getting a psychology degree. The field of sociology is ESPECIALLY hypocritical when it comes to this reality, where they will call out the selfish and flawed pursuits in effectively every aspect of society, but do so while making the most absolutely USELESS and academia bait research imaginable.
      Their research either makes such broad claims about society that asks for sweeping changes to massive systems that are unfounded, unimaginable, or untested, say absolutely nothing at all with buzzwords and semantics with no real data or facts (effectively just someone’s political opinion), or they tackle something with such a hyper specific viewpoint that it proves nothing, misses/misinterprets critical information, or nothing would ever be done about it by anyone in power. All the while sucking up so much money in salaries, research grants, publications, university and lab space, book deals, and political pandering. All while taking massive research trips to foreign countries that are effectively research based sabbaticals, taking people and research assistants away from actually critical studies, and exploiting the lives of impoverished locals for papers ands posts that are effectively just “poverty p***”.
      All of this to teach and further some of THE MOST USELESS majors in the entire collegiate system that have very little direct translation to the working world, research or otherwise.

    • @carpballet
      @carpballet Год назад

      @@courier6960 Sociopathic just like Armstrong

    • @keldencowan
      @keldencowan Год назад

      Yeah, I might sympathize with the temptation to eliminate outliers in data because you think it's noise. But that's not even what happened here. He never even visited the train station (or any of those buildings) to conduct the experiment. The data is 100% made up! It's very disingenuous to try and pass that off as massaging data because nature won't cooperate. He never even asked nature!

    • @azearaazymoto461
      @azearaazymoto461 Год назад +1

      What's the point then? How hard would it have been to actually collect the data? It shouldn't take more than a few weeks anyway.

    • @courier6960
      @courier6960 Год назад

      @@azearaazymoto461
      Pretty hard actually, even a simple paper can take months, you forget that you have to actually get people in seats for that, train staff on how to administer tests, do screening sessions and forms that have to be sorted through to confirm that people don’t have a condition that would cause them to be excluded, get everything approved by review boards, get funding for any and all supplies and staff, etc.

  • @MimouFirst
    @MimouFirst Год назад +25

    I remember this. It was on the news quite a lot. Definitely put a dent in my trust in social science research. Now years later, I've learned that quite a few 'high profile' research findings in social science have replication problems or the author thinks their study has a problem in some way and they doubt their findings. So many things that are put in books as a truth are doubtful. It makes me sad. I love reading about social science, but I don't like it when I need to worry about if the studies written about are based on decent science or not.
    I would love it if you talk about scientists/ authors and books that are still trustworthy and based on good science.

    • @mignonhagemeijer3726
      @mignonhagemeijer3726 Год назад +10

      I'm sorry to break it to you but all science fields have issues like that. Like medicine and biology there are people literally (badly) photoshopping their pictures of cells or fudging around with their staining images. In CS and AI people just overtraining train models tweaking them learing to results that literally say nothing in comparison to other papers. In physics you had the "Schön scandal" were data was fabricated. Acadenics are people. And other people working on unreasonable pressure to excel and produce. This doesn't bread honestly and there will always be bad apples.
      Thats why there is so much debate about the peer review process and people pushing towards open science etc. It's difficult to spot fraude sometimes even when you have a highly trained eye often also because of a lack of time.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад +2

      @@mignonhagemeijer3726 100% agreed.

    • @MimouFirst
      @MimouFirst Год назад +5

      @@mignonhagemeijer3726 Ahh, even more saddening :p
      I think you're right about the pressure applied to scientists, especially the ones teaching at universities. The system should change.

    • @mrjones2721
      @mrjones2721 Год назад

      Part of the problem is that data made up to fit fake hypotheses often tells a more interesting tale than the real data. It’s hard for people to let go of, even when the scientist themself is out there telling people they were wrong. It happened with the researcher who came up with the alpha wolf theory-he came by his results honestly, and later realized he was wrong, but no one wants to listen to his corrections. It happened with Andrew Wakefield, who faked an entire body of work, and now far too many people think vaccines cause autism.
      The good news is that if you come up with a study that goes viral, it doesn’t matter whether you did it right. Even if you’re exposed and you lose your reputation, your credentials, and your job, you can still get rich fleecing the people who believe you. Sure, you might destroy tens of thousands of lives. But what’s that next to a guaranteed, and huge, income?

    • @Account.for.Comment
      @Account.for.Comment Год назад

      From a more Art, Literature and Design background, the problems with Social Sciences are the Believers that it is close to Natural Sciences.
      One, society changes. A great study five years, may not be replicable just because the times change. Two, humans actions and desires lie between art and science. Three, people are different and don't fit neatly in a lable.

  • @imagingteam
    @imagingteam Год назад +25

    Academic fraud should be criminalized

    • @anacondalove1423
      @anacondalove1423 Год назад

      Why?

    • @kramarancko1107
      @kramarancko1107 Год назад +7

      @@anacondalove1423Science is a sacred practice of the west, and it should be treated as such. On top of that, this would be a great dissuader of any academics thinking of getting their hands dirty. It should absolutely be criminalized, because fraud is fraud no matter what kind and by definition fraud is harmful to others

    • @robertbeisert3315
      @robertbeisert3315 Год назад +1

      ​@@anacondalove1423it's fraud, mate. It not only defrauds the funders by providing them false results for their money, but any follow-up research becomes more expensive and difficult due to the falsehood.
      See also: the hundreds of papers and billions in research on Alzheimer's based on the fraudulent Stanford study

    • @phenax1144
      @phenax1144 Год назад +1

      @@kramarancko1107science is not exclusive to the west, it is very sus to write this way

    • @kramarancko1107
      @kramarancko1107 Год назад +6

      @@phenax1144I never said it was

  • @iridium137
    @iridium137 Год назад +9

    It's shocking that there's 6 people with more retracted papers than him.

  • @thor3279
    @thor3279 8 месяцев назад +1

    Wow. Somewhat caught lying/committing fraud that lead them to prominence who doesn't double down on lying and ego, admitting they were wrong, not blaming others and trying to burn everything down, and taking responsibility for their actions and mistakes.
    There is hope. Thanks for this content.

  • @L09110
    @L09110 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm a Psychology student here at Tilburg University and he is really a great example of how not to do science. And Marcel Zeelenberg is even my Professor in Economic Psychology... I didn't knew that he know him so well, he didn't told us that

  • @foggymedia
    @foggymedia Год назад +49

    “It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines"
    I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as editor of The New England Journal of Medicine”
    Marcia Angell

    • @chicken29843
      @chicken29843 Год назад +2

      What an arrogant assertion, born of the comforts provided by modern medicine.

    • @foggymedia
      @foggymedia Год назад +2

      @Divergent_Integral Well said ... I think Chicken Little @chicken29843 didn't read far enough to know I was quoting the Editor of the New England Journal of Medicine; and chicken little brain thought that I was making a personal judgement statement.

    • @areaxisthegurkha
      @areaxisthegurkha Год назад

      ​@@chicken29843so your parents own you as a property then.

    • @htf5555
      @htf5555 Год назад +1

      no pleasure?this, this is freedom!…

  • @JacktheDoctor
    @JacktheDoctor Год назад +63

    This made me wanna watch a video on Joachim Boldt, the one with the most papers being taken down, at almost 200.

    • @azearaazymoto461
      @azearaazymoto461 Год назад +8

      Lol, same. He was asking if I was wondering about what happened next and I was just wondering about the story of the top 3 retracted.

    • @ViktorTronin
      @ViktorTronin 2 месяца назад

      It is still hard for him to beat Meghan Markle in sociopathy contest

  • @vw9659
    @vw9659 Год назад +13

    If the wikipedia page is correct about this decade-old case, his graduate students indeed rarely saw the raw data, and rarely conducted an actual experiment. That would make it a very, very unusual lab.
    It's much more common for a lab head in a big lab to have no contact with raw data at all (often down to not even knowing exactly where to find it). So there are usually checks and balances in place that make scientific fraud difficult for senior scientists. It's more often done by a "lone wolf" at a lower level, who is involved in data collection (eg a graduate student under pressure to finish their thesis and establish a successful career trajectory).
    The most important check is replication. When an important finding is published, other scientists generally rush to reproduce the experiment, often with even better methods. If they can't get similar results, the credibility of the original work and its authors is damaged. They will likely have a harder time getting research funding and getting pubished.
    With open data becoming a more common requirement, fraud will become even harder for the very small number of scientists who might contemplate it.

  • @viral_suppressor4154
    @viral_suppressor4154 Год назад +2

    According to a Post Doc from Delhi U, some research groups publish a paper every few months, which for the kind of research, amount of resources, reviews and check ups involved are absolutely unrealistic. Forcefully, some of those papers have to be fake; some of them are indeed fake and the students know, yet they are powerless to do anything against it.

  • @thewolf5459
    @thewolf5459 Год назад +6

    With all of this data fraud coming to light, both past and present, what oversight techniques have journal editors put in place? Would love to hear your take and/or your findings on that across various academic fields. I think submitting de-identified data sets to a journal would be a start.

  • @ru40342
    @ru40342 Год назад +7

    Very well done video.
    One of the first things that my Phd supervisors told me was to form a conclusion based on data, not to form data based on a conclusion. A honest research that shows insignificant results is much better than a dishonest (manipulated) research with groundbreaking results.
    I think many people fall into the same issues as this professor here. He wanted shocking and groundbreaking results, and willingly manipulate his data to support his conclusions. Unfortunately, the same can be said to many people in academia that I know (even though they did not manipulate the data, but they use unsuitable research methods to get what they want).

  • @nudgepodcast
    @nudgepodcast Год назад +6

    Great video Pete, the quality of these videos is sky rocketing.

  • @cariyaputta
    @cariyaputta Год назад +11

    "I got blinded by my goal" said every cheater ever.

  • @Yosk77
    @Yosk77 Год назад +39

    I like how "professionals" get caught doing their job wrong all the time, and I have to meticulouisly edit my resume so i can work at fedx kikos 😒

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC Год назад +5

      Class system problems

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 10 месяцев назад +2

      😂 you’re not alone. But honestly, doesn’t the way the world is functioning say everything to affirm that that’s how you have to act to gain status or power? We work for a living because we rather be capable of honesty and conscientiousness than be screwups ruining society with a death of a thousand cuts. Keep it up and don’t be like them.

    • @ViktorTronin
      @ViktorTronin 2 месяца назад

      yet, you most likely attack your peer, not your real enemies, another one who is trying to get an entry-level job

    • @ViktorTronin
      @ViktorTronin 2 месяца назад

      tells a lot about your intelligence

  • @EricAwful313
    @EricAwful313 Год назад +5

    Good one. So glad you are doing this. The system cares more about money and ego then the science itself. This dynamic permeates throughout the rest of modern society too. It's gotten pretty disgusting.

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Год назад +1

      The joys of living in a capitalistic society.

    • @amentco8445
      @amentco8445 Год назад

      ​@@nickl5658nah, the joys of living in reality. Things happen the same wherever a government can hold potentially infinite power over anyone.

  • @applepeel1662
    @applepeel1662 Год назад +7

    Please become the coffeezilla for academic fraud
    I love the way you portray these stories. Academia is full of pretense and people who think theyre intellectually superior which often leads to high levels of insecurity.

  • @LorxusIsAFox
    @LorxusIsAFox Год назад +2

    "For unknown reasons, their reports were dismissed."
    That right there? That treatment of people who overcame the fear of a very real possibility of their advisor retaliating against them? That's why fraud continues.

  • @glencarolo2597
    @glencarolo2597 Год назад +9

    Your content is so refreshing. Pulling back the curtin on academia is so important, and hopefully, it will change the system long term. Unfortunately, until then, who can we believe. They have lost the public trust, and that is crime.

    • @mrjones2721
      @mrjones2721 Год назад

      The fact that a few people are charlatans doesn’t destroy the entire field. There will always be a few charlatans, and they’ll always take too long to be unmasked. That’s how humans are. Doesn’t matter what the field is.
      The main thing is to remember that if something is deeply satisfying, it’s probably either fake or spun so hard that it might as well be fake. That’s true in news, in gossip, in history, and in academia. The clear, easy-to-understand, satisfying stories are wrong. The muddled, unfinished, slightly confusing stories with lots of outliers and no clear answers are probably correct.

  • @daesong1378
    @daesong1378 Год назад +1

    He shoulda went with “plot twist: this was actually a big experiment in how flawed the academic system is”

  • @mimibaker2022
    @mimibaker2022 Год назад +10

    Anyone else notice how often Science is involved in these things. How is it a coincidence? Why are they still considered so prestigious?

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC Год назад

      Lol because every other system is flawed on purpose, whereas scientific method is pure but corrupted by bad individuals

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube Год назад +1

      Even the studies we just accept are weird beyond words. "We made children afraid of rats and then showed them rats and that's why we know about the fear response."
      Im sorry but did you say you tormented children for science?

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel 11 месяцев назад +1

      Probably because the ratio of prestigious, important papers to fraud is massive.

  • @Suburp212
    @Suburp212 Год назад +11

    I do not get it. He could so easily have made real studies and become a real hero. Such a sad story.

    • @Fergus316
      @Fergus316 11 месяцев назад

      In real life scientific studies often have neutral results. Heroism is not the norm.

  • @kumar2ji
    @kumar2ji 11 месяцев назад +1

    This fraud is a serious offense that can hurt many. Bad behavior should not be rewarded and honesty is not valid when you are caught

  • @ChiefBridgeFuser
    @ChiefBridgeFuser Год назад +4

    This brings the name Michael Mann from the Pennsylvania State University to mind. I wonder how many areas there are where fraud has shaped public perceptions of "truth" found through science?

  • @darkguardian1314
    @darkguardian1314 Год назад +2

    It’s going to be worst now to detect fraud with AI and since anyone can use Google Map Streetview and photos to see most locations in the world.
    I was able to virtually walk the grounds of The Taj Mahal without ever visiting India from my home on Lake Erie.

  • @robertjamesstove
    @robertjamesstove Год назад +1

    "There's something about the environment, the publication pressure." Said no firefighter / oil rig worker / triage nurse ever.
    Does Stapel have the faintest idea of how narcissistic this sort of lament makes him look? And would still make him look *even if he had never committed academic fraud?*

  • @projectmc15
    @projectmc15 Год назад +2

    Your videos are always so interesting, such an underrated channel!

  • @Jughead24
    @Jughead24 Год назад +1

    How long do you suppose funding would continue for inconclusive research?

  • @IvanRamirez-dr5cx
    @IvanRamirez-dr5cx Год назад

    -Pete, how many videos are you going to make about fake data scandal??
    -Yes

  • @pozzowon
    @pozzowon Год назад +3

    Definitely super refreshing to see someone own their lies! I hope he finds a way to help fix the system with his honest redemption tour

  • @sergeipilyugin239
    @sergeipilyugin239 Год назад +6

    Something is rotten in the state of behavioral science.

    • @червонадзюбка
      @червонадзюбка Год назад +1

      All science to be honest 😅

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад

      @@червонадзюбка as a neuroscientist, agreed.

    • @debianlasmana8794
      @debianlasmana8794 Год назад

      @rainerausdemspring3584
      they calculated carefully,avarage joe like us won't even notice

    • @debianlasmana8794
      @debianlasmana8794 Год назад

      @rainerausdemspring3584
      In order provide proofs math need calculate in the proccess,and minimize the risk.

    • @debianlasmana8794
      @debianlasmana8794 Год назад

      @rainerausdemspring3584
      LOL.... that claim not even counter my comment.

  • @fireturkeyfly11
    @fireturkeyfly11 Год назад +1

    Data fraud is common, especially in studies that cannot be exact - clinical studies for one, especially in pharmaceutical industries.

  • @DrRinse
    @DrRinse Год назад

    Having witnessed academic fraud at my university amongst PhD students and supervisors, I've lost some faith in science, once a passion of mine in pharmaceutics. I nearly was accepted for a PhD but it was a blessing in disguise. I'm now on a completely different career path.

  • @oliberrr
    @oliberrr Год назад

    6:40 I’m wondering what’s with the top 6 as well.

  • @janegreen9340
    @janegreen9340 Год назад +2

    How much pressure is put on researchers by the funders to produce certain results? How much pressure is put on to ignore the answers the funders do not like? Conflicts of interest should be excluded from any research - the Masters could have too much influence (?).

  • @alexnorth2452
    @alexnorth2452 Год назад

    I find it so incredibly disappointing that he made almost 60 false papers, and is only ranked 7th, always nice to be reminded that there is no bottom bar to the trash, and you can never set your expectations low enough

  • @togi1010
    @togi1010 Год назад

    how the heck does the study in Utrecht station get accepted and published? if you are talking about how people say at a bench the minimum requirement from is to have a photo of the benches itself(to show how messy they were). How did that even get past reviewers???

  • @heikkint
    @heikkint Год назад +2

    Next step: Failing forward in the academia. I fully expect this to become a thing because why not.

  • @playapapapa23
    @playapapapa23 Год назад

    Love the vids. I’m a physicist who lives in the world of publish a parish and all that. Never once in my life have I considered fabricating results. It’s hard to imagine.

  • @Lorendrawn
    @Lorendrawn Год назад +1

    Grants should be offered to peer reviewers who find doctored data.

  • @Steve-ou8nw
    @Steve-ou8nw Год назад

    "Retraction Watch" ok so the character has sunk this low now that we need this...

  • @vortanoise.2625
    @vortanoise.2625 Год назад +2

    I'm a math student and I'd like to know if it is even possible to commit this kind of fraud in pure math fields.
    I know cases of professors literally stealing research, but I a mathematical work is just right or wrong.
    You can't fake it so much.
    Can anyone help me?

    • @matheusjahnke8643
      @matheusjahnke8643 Год назад +3

      Just be a famous mathematician and write on the margins of books "there's a beautiful proof for this fact which unfortunately doesn't fit this margin"

    • @salganik
      @salganik Год назад +3

      Good point. And that is why most of such (extremely rare) frauds mostly occur outside of mathematics or physics. While in less accurate fields of study, there is a trend to have open-access datasets, which also helps.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад +1

      @@salganik untrue statement. the fraud differs in terms of attribution fraud and data theft and data mining for statistical work.

  • @PhongLe-od6fo
    @PhongLe-od6fo Год назад +1

    Separate data collection from data analysis and interpretation.
    For example, if your lab run a serie of experiments, you can only publish the methodology and the data. You can not write an abstract, result or conclusion.
    Once the data is in the public domain, anyone can analyze and interpret your data into another paper, but you will be given lead authorship. However, you can not collaborate with the interpretors of your data.
    Once this analysis is published, you can then choose to agree or disagree with the analysis.

  • @Kumarcentral
    @Kumarcentral Год назад +1

    Any plans to cover Dan Ariely?

  • @tensu7260
    @tensu7260 Год назад +33

    After losing my PhD due to prejudice, nothing surprises me anymore.

    • @metalslegend
      @metalslegend Год назад +10

      wait, ...how?

    • @tensu7260
      @tensu7260 Год назад +1

      ​@@metalslegendOne of my supervisors(and head of life sciences at my former university) conspired with my examiner (first year annual review) to fail me. My other supervisor didn't know how to use the FEA software that he was supposedly an "expert" in. I have (substantial) evidence for both statements mentioned. I even have a video recording of one academic (she gave me consent to record our conversation) admitting that the "expert" doesn't know how to use the software (she left the university one month later, to another country). The university, like the liars that they are, sided with the "academics". My PhD ended last October, after calling them out for not doing anything 3 months (and pretending as if nothing happened, despite the amount of complaints I was making - and the severity of the complaints).I was alienated for over 3 months until I finally had enough and called them out. Less than 24 hours later, I lost my PhD, they stated it was "due to failing my first year annual review".

    • @tensu7260
      @tensu7260 Год назад

      Here's an email (without names) asking for help: I am writing to you concerning my university. There have been several incidences that have occurred that strongly suggest that the university has no laws or regulation - and can do whatever they please if it means protecting their own best interests - without caring at all about their own policies or even the law. My email relates to my university (to my best understanding) showing clear signs on hiding and not caring about bullying and harassment, discrimination, fitness to practice processes, procedural irregularities, research supervision (or lack thereof), poor teaching provision and facilities, unfair practices, and a clear neglect of welfare. I should also add that I do have an ombudsman looking at this situation (after my level 3 complaint failed - which didn’t consider any of the racist claims, that I have proof of, due to it being a “HR issue”. I have not been given a date for when HR will tell me about what is going on either. In fact, the level 3 outcome read as if no effort was put into it, despite several delays: 4 delays, with no reasons given).
      On the 27th September, I email the dignity team (I have evidence of this in a pdf file) with more information about what I am complaining about. I didn’t get a reply until the 11th October (2 weeks later) stating that there are issues with what I wrote and that it isn’t clear what I am complaining about and how it relates to dignity I have evidence of this in a pdf file). I would, normally, be patient with regards to these things if something similar didn’t happen with my level 3 submission - the complaints team clearly stalled (I submitted only to be told - three weeks later - it isn’t correct… Even though there’s a 10-day deadline to submission, this can all be seen in the pdf file I have) to “subtly” tell me that the person whom I had a meeting with regarding my level 2 complaint wasn’t at fault for the laughable level 2 complaints procedure that occurred. The meeting is also recorded (by that person). This enraged me because - since submitting my level 1 complaint - I have been wanting my PhD to resume back to a normal manner, because the wait has caused me significant distress due to my anxiety (and this is shown in my support plan pdf files).
      I have attached an email (in pdf format) that I sent on the 13th of October: In that file, I state that I made a sarcastic comment stating (as can be seen in a pdf file that I have) “I suppose I didn’t lose my PhD, despite having two U grades in my first year because of admin issues. Racism didn’t occur. No. How could it, we are a loving, caring, fantastic, set of people. We won’t tell other people not to reply to your emails for legal reasons. We won’t end bimonthly meetings without any reasons given (with a company associated to my PhD), rendering you with zero motivation to do anything”. Today (14th October) I find out that my PhD has now been terminated - 3 months after a racist incident that occurred during my first-year review was recorded, thanks to some genius thinking “Ah, yes, this sarcastic comment has a point - let us do that…” The racism that occurred in my first-year re-review (that shouldn’t have happened in the first place due to collusion…) is also recorded. The university knows of what happened and clearly agree with me (I mean, explain to me why a BAME member knows of what happened? This can be seen in a screenshot I have). Despite all of this, I have not been given a date for when HR will tell me about what is going on.
      I remember I submitted a complaint to Report and Support (using their online form via their website) on the 3rd September, informing them about Supervisor A being nominated for an award. On the 6th September, I get an email from my department stating that the bimonthly meeting have been cancelled (I have a screenshot of this). I then sent another complaint on the 6th September telling Report and Support that I will email the awards team about what Supervisor A has done (conspiring for me to lose my PhD) if they don’t. I then get an email from Report and Support (my first from them after 4 or 5 complaints - as can be seen in a pdf file that I have). I finally, the next day -7th September - I get a reply from the person I emailed telling them about some good news (I created a potential software that COMPANY wanted) after 2 weeks of no reply [this can be seen in a pdf file that I have]. This suggests that even wellbeing have been told to not email/converse with me to hide information from me - and that I can’t trust anyone at the university. Even the email that I got to re-register into my 3rd year (on the 8th August) came on the same day that I got an email from a person that works for COMOPANY, stating that they will have a talk with my department [as can be seen in a pdf file that I have] - meaning that them allowing me to re-register was NOT a mistake; it was specifically done in order to allow me to continue with my PhD - so as long as I don’t escalate things or show extreme anger due to their neglect, apparently. How can I ever be happy if no one is checking on my wellbeing? How can I trust anyone when all the evidence shows that no one is on my side? When all the evidence shows that the university are trying their hardest to get rid of me (especially now that I am escalating the complaints)? I feel extremely alone, and my mental health has been damaged due to what has happened.
      I have already submitted an appeal (against termination of PhD) but I have also had enough of the university. Laughably, in my termination letter - it writes something along the lines of “after careful consideration…”, as if this wasn’t a rash decision that was done based on a comment that I wrote - sarcastically - one day prior.
      It is quite clear, ironically (I say “ironically” because this is what academics have accused me of themselves… I, somehow, don’t/can’t think) that academics and other staff members do not think before they do anything. They just do. “Ah, we will just change the deadline date to whatever we like - even though we made the initial deadline date in the first place. But don’t worry, I assure you - we couldn’t do anything about it”. It is quite laughable because it is very clear what is going on - nothing even remotely subtle or nuanced going on. I am a reasonable person, and I am understanding of certain things.
      For example, to even submit my level 3 complaint in the first place - the complaints team clearly stalled (I submitted only to be told - three weeks later - it isn’t correct… Even though there’s a 10-day deadline to submission) to “subtly” tell me that the person whom I had a meeting with regarding my level 2 complaint wasn’t at fault for the laughable level 2 complaints procedure that occurred. Unless complaints can give me a very clear reason why it took 3 weeks for me to get an email that says “wait… erm… there’s a mistake so I need you to resubmit that… yeah” then this is clearly the case. But guess what, after thinking about it - I agreed, it wasn’t that person’s fault (that I had a meeting with).
      I should also add that ACADEMIC B was involved with my level 1 complaint (as can be seen in a pdf file that I have); she also admitted about what I already stated about SUPERVISOR C (the main subject of my level 2 complaint) in a meeting that I, thankfully, recorded; ACADEMIC B left the university about a month after this recording. I also have proof that I did, in fact, have a conversation with ACADEMIC B - before I even made a level 1 complaint - regarding my extreme concerns regarding supervision (in a pdf file).
      During the 3 months between the racist incident (first year re-review, that is recorded) and the PhD termination, I had no supervisors and no direct correspondence at all to clarify what is going on with regards to my PhD.

    • @simonl1938
      @simonl1938 Год назад +6

      Can you elaborate on what happened?

    • @ingGS
      @ingGS Год назад

      I’m here for the story too 😮.

  • @dongshenghan1473
    @dongshenghan1473 Год назад +2

    Can't wait for the next episode where Pete the truth of behavioral science is not science

  • @glowerworm
    @glowerworm Год назад +4

    His honesty afterwards isn't something to value in my opinion. The only reason he's being so honest is because he was so obviously committing fraud that he couldn't deny it. Because he admits it, he now gets to write books and give speeches about his story so that he can make money off of his infamy. Not really that admirable.

  • @estern001
    @estern001 Год назад

    Refreshing. That's what I was thinking. Let him be the guide for the many, many scandals that WILL be uncovered in the near future. I have a feeling, Pete, that you're going to be getting more material for your videos than you'll know what to do with.

  • @roys8870
    @roys8870 Год назад +9

    Trust the science they say, quoting findings backed by fake data as gospels of truth.

  • @williewonka6694
    @williewonka6694 Год назад +1

    A major problem is the grant providers expect satisfactory results for their money. Writers understand the importance of producing what is expected. The grant process is in control of "science". Ordinary citizens should have the opportunity to read studies that are publically funded to see for themselves what the government plans to do.

  • @septemberamyx
    @septemberamyx Год назад +1

    Awesome! I agree with your closing remarks.

  • @tomorrow6
    @tomorrow6 Год назад +1

    The field of data science is filled with this issue of the desired results outweighing the messy data and real world data in particular being contrary to preconceived notions.

  • @zaffyjay2806
    @zaffyjay2806 Год назад +1

    Does anybody have any idea why data fraud occurs in academics? Could it be that those professors have to keep up with their publishing requirements? Like in my country prof/dr has to publish a certain amount of paper/book per year to keep their title.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 Год назад +4

      it occurs for the same reason it does everywhere privileged people who don't care about anyone but themselves trying to get ahead even further.

    • @gur262
      @gur262 Год назад +1

      Isn't that obvious? If you actually do the black white person messy clean train station experiment you 1. Gotta do the work. It's effort. It takes time. Sitting there waiting n watching. Cleaning and messing up the station 2. You are not guaranteed an eye catching result. Things might be inconclusive. Meh. If you just make the whole thing up you get your interesting or even sensational result without sitting at a train station for hours.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov Год назад

      @@jesipohl6717white Privilege

  • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
    @itsgonnabeanaurfromme 10 месяцев назад

    This may be a stupid question, but how are those studies approved? In human studies and medical studies, there is a lot of IRB requirements and approval. Is it that different when it comes to behavioral science? You can just observe people on a train station?

  • @janlaag
    @janlaag Год назад +5

    Proof addicts being like: "imma make a study on fraud forgiveness and troll them all by saying I've cheated".

  • @shanehummusunfiltered
    @shanehummusunfiltered Год назад +5

    Absolutely love this channel. Coffeezilla of academic fraud

  • @karenm7449
    @karenm7449 Год назад +6

    Quite frankly, I now have doubts about most so-called academic research findings. We are lied to daily about a range of things and nobody either cares enough or takes the time to check the results. The hockey stick is the perfect example.

  • @nu80sdiscofunk
    @nu80sdiscofunk Год назад +1

    great video! love the new editing too btw👍

  • @anelemalinga2132
    @anelemalinga2132 Год назад +2

    Great video Pete. As an academic myself I hope I never get desperate.

  • @puimepuime8952
    @puimepuime8952 10 дней назад

    There's no excuse for his crime, he is sorry because he was caught, no because he repents. He should rot in prison.

  • @kensmith8152
    @kensmith8152 Год назад +11

    This just goes to show how long established academic ideology becomes an echo chamber whereby they believe their own lies!

  • @patrickyeh1102
    @patrickyeh1102 Год назад

    My Behavioral Economics professor said the field was treated as a joke among economists, but he didnt know why. Well, now I know.

  • @Asjunior
    @Asjunior Год назад

    Thanks for your channel! Kudos from Brazil!

  • @krishgounder5116
    @krishgounder5116 Год назад

    I am so glad he confessed his wrongdoing. May he recover and take care of his family.

  • @FirstnameLastname-sw1ry
    @FirstnameLastname-sw1ry 8 месяцев назад +1

    I like how we're suppose to "trust the science" as if it's infallible. You know, trust it, or lose your job.

  • @davidchase9424
    @davidchase9424 Год назад +3

    Why is faking data for profit/fame not a crime!?!

  • @AncoraImparoPiper
    @AncoraImparoPiper Год назад

    Excellent as always, but I agree with others here that the stock photos are very distracting. I actually closed my eyes to just listen to you speaking.

  • @The_Binninator
    @The_Binninator 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for pronouncing all these names correctly ❤

  • @cybervigilante
    @cybervigilante Год назад +2

    I wonder if the students who got their PhD's on false data, got to keep their PhDs? I hope they did since they were victims. OTOH, they didn't get the full practice of other students.

  • @martinhuerter8065
    @martinhuerter8065 Год назад

    Pete, I really enjoy your videos, keep up the good work. I have believed for a long time the science community has morphed into something untrustworthy, biased or suspicious. It is unfortunate that a few bad apples are causing so much skepticism in the public who rely on science and research to better their lives. IMHO, science and research should be something for society, not to create fame and fortune for "rock star" want to be scientist. I am not saying scientific accolades should be forbidden, I am just saying the focus, outcomes and goals of should be examined just like you are doing. Thank you!!

  • @Philadelphiamalayale
    @Philadelphiamalayale Год назад

    This happens more often than you can imagine.

  • @simonwiltshire7089
    @simonwiltshire7089 7 месяцев назад

    Just found your channel. Really excellent! Thank you.

  • @diegomardones6651
    @diegomardones6651 Год назад

    Wonderful, thanks, i was pleasantly surprised by and loved the end 🙂. And fully agree to it.

  • @EricPalmer_DaddyOh
    @EricPalmer_DaddyOh Год назад

    Sad state of affairs in academic research.

  • @executivesteps
    @executivesteps Год назад

    And what about his thesis students? What happened to them and their career prospects?

  • @benk4088
    @benk4088 Год назад +20

    I have no sympathy with him whatsoever. Why would you make up data to support a narrative of racial hostility. Its damaging for cases where there are genuine racial prejudice, and it’s stoking controversy for his own status. It’s despicable behaviour and he is only sorry he got caught.

  • @evita9284
    @evita9284 Год назад +2

    He didn't fake data. He just followed the old myth that 1000 monkeys typing randomly can create a work better than Shakespeare. By faking 50 papers with random data, there is a chance that plain trial and error can discover the secret theory of making warp drives using dark energy. 🤣

  • @yangjianhunt
    @yangjianhunt 10 месяцев назад

    The system needs an overhaul.

  • @CamCovello
    @CamCovello Год назад +1

    Get a lapel mic. Your content deserves it.

  • @pepoeiro
    @pepoeiro Год назад +2

    I understand some of the dutch culture that allowed him to act like that in the aftermath, but he ruin PhD lifes .. like the effort to build a first milestone in their careers

  • @ideeRotolanti
    @ideeRotolanti Год назад +1

    you should focus more on the whole academic system than on single cases. If 90% of professors knows that peer review is a fraud as it is never done, but still get to enjoy the benefit of advancing each other careers, than the issue is larger than the single cases.