Trust But Verify
The Crisis in Biomedicine
- In-Person
- 国产视频
740 15th Street NW, Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005 - 11AM 鈥 12:30PM EDT
Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me twice, shame on scientific research? Research studies investigating other research studies 鈥 yes, it鈥檚 very meta 鈥 have diagnosed a 鈥渞eproducibility鈥 crisis in biomedicine. Simply put, it鈥檚 shockingly difficult to reproduce the results of many laboratory research studies relied upon as authoritative and definitive.
As a result, the reliability of a large share of the research published about medicine and the biology of medicine is in question. The reasons vary from poor training of young scientists engaged in ever more complex and esoteric inquiries to perverse incentives that reward researchers for flashy findings but don鈥檛 penalize them for being wrong. Some errors are inevitable鈥攊n fact, it鈥檚 a part of science. But today鈥檚 reproducibility crisis is challenging the very idea that scientific knowledge expands by research studies that build upon each other. Is a transformation of the underlying culture of biomedical research necessary? How difficult will it be to accomplish?
Reliable studies show you should join Future Tense on Thursday, April 21, in Washington, DC, to explore this crisis in biomedicine.
Follow the conversation online using #BioMedCrisis and by following .
Agenda:
Verify: How Should the Scientific Process Change to Address the Reproducibility Crisis?
Emma Frow
Assistant Professor, School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering and School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University
Brian Nosek听
Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Virginia
Executive Director and Co-founder, Center for Open Science听听
Lawrence A. Tabak
Principal Deputy Director, National Institutes of Health
Moderator:
Carolyn Johnson听
Business of health reporter, The Washington Post听
听
Trust: How Science Journalism Can Help the Public Evaluate Findings
Arturo Casadevall听
Alfred & Jill Sommer Professor and Chair, W. Harry Feinstone Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Johns Hopkins University
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University听听
Carolyn Compton
Professor, Life Science, Arizona State University
Professor, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine
Chief Medical Officer, Complex Adaptive Systems Institute, Arizona State University
Richard Harris听
Science Correspondent, National Public Radio (on leave)
Visiting Scholar, Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes, Arizona State University听听
Moderator:
Rachel Gross听
Editorial Assistant, Slate
Board member, DC Science Writers Association听听