Unreliable
Bias, Fraud, and the Reproducibility Crisis in Biomedical Research
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Publishing:11th Mar '25
£25.00
This title is due to be published on 11th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
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Reproducibility is fundamental to the scientific method. After reading a paper describing research findings, a scientist should be able to repeat the experiment and obtain the same results. Yet an alarming number—perhaps as high as 90 percent—of published biomedical research papers face challenges in independent replication. Such issues range from honest mistakes to outright fraud. The scope of this crisis, however, underscores deeper systemic issues within the scientific community: its culture, incentives, and institutions.
In Unreliable, the distinguished scientist Csaba Szabo examines the causes and consequences of the reproducibility crisis in biomedical research, showing why the factors that encourage misconduct stem from flaws in real-world science. There are many culprits, including commonplace research methods and dubious statistical techniques. Academic career incentives, hypercompetition for grant funding, and a bias toward publishing positive results have exacerbated the problem. Deliberate data manipulation and fabricated findings churned out by “paper mills” are disturbingly common. Academic institutions and publishers, for their part, have perpetuated a culture of impunity.
Szabo explores how these failures have hindered scientific progress and impeded the development of new treatments, and he introduces readers to the “science sleuths” who tirelessly uncover misconduct. He proposes comprehensive reforms, from scientific training to the grant system through the publication process, to address the root causes of the crisis. Written in clear language and leavened with a keen sense of irony, Unreliable is an essential account of the reproducibility crisis that gives readers an inside look at how science is actually done.
In the name of honest and dedicated scientists, Unreliable is an outcry against the broken system of biomedical research. Csaba Szabo gives a comprehensive analysis of inept grant award schemes and corrupt publication practices and calls for an urgent overhaul. -- Katalin Karikó, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Unreliable courageously examines the systemic issues plaguing biomedical studies—from immense pressures to flawed incentives that drive researchers toward unethical practices. It is essential reading for anyone concerned with the integrity of scientific research and the implications of its shortcomings on society. -- Albert-László Barabási, Northeastern University
The problem of irreproducible and fraudulent research is addressed in depth by an active researcher at the top level of biomedical science. This highly readable book gives unique insights into the process of how research is funded and conducted, how this creates problems, and what we need to do to counteract an alarming growth in shoddy science. -- Dorothy Bishop, Oxford University
Science is a respected profession, but it is the product of human activity. Thus, human errors are inevitable. Moreover, some scientists make hubristic claims, and some even engage in data falsification and fabrication. Unreliable exposes the various factors that contribute to the reproducibility crisis in biomedical science. -- György Buzsáki, New York University
The stories in the book are from the frontlines, where those of us who try to maintain research funding and run a lab are fighting misconduct daily. Importantly, the book offers concrete solutions for how we as scientists might hope to fix the broken systems of research oversight. -- Paul Brookes, University of Rochester Medical Center
If one of the world's most highly cited biomedical scientists concludes that the majority of the published biomedical literature is unreliable, you better pay attention. Unreliable is supported by vast amounts of data, and it is infused with biting, sarcastic dark humor. -- George Hasko, Columbia University
Jaw-dropping. A troubling wake-up call for scientific researchers. * Publishers Weekly *
ISBN: 9780231216241
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
328 pages