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by ridaj
2260 days ago
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It reminds me of the paper reporting that neutrinos had been detected going faster than the speed of light[0]. It turned out to be an instrumentation issue. Some of the folks involved had to step down. Yes, it is important to publish results that violate established theories, but if there's already a lot of validation of those theories through experimentation, you're going to have legitimate pushback, especially if your method of experimentation isn't the most sophisticated. If the result of your publication is a theoretical breakthrough, then that's great, but unless you're in the top tier within that discipline, the likely outcome is that your research turns out to have a big flaw which you missed, and you invite a bunch of people to point out to the world that you can't do science properly... [0] https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2012/06/once-again-physicist... |
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We don't understand why our data doesn't line up with theory and this isn't some super well funded experiment like the ones at the LHC with like a million grad. students. This is just me in the lab alone with the hundreds of subtle ways the experiment could have gone wrong or needed a slight modification to the theory. It would take us a lot of effort to distinguish an experiment gone wrong from an interesting new development and that's not always worth it. Especially for such a niche area of research like I'm in.
Also, we did publish our data. We just did it in a conference proceeding with a lot of caveats attached to it instead of in a big journal article. That's the aspect that I was complaining about, but I do understand my advisor's decision.
I have to strongly disagree that science is broken here.