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by jokethrowaway
2108 days ago
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That's very interesting!
I remember this happening a lot with sports / nutrition studies. I'm not surprised to see medicine in there as well.
Overall, understanding the brain is hard, understanding our bodies is hard, it's normal that we can come up with a limited amount of consistently reproducible knowledge per year. From all my friends who pursued STEM, I assume this is happening because of the pressure on people pursuing higher education at all costs, not finding enough qualified jobs, getting stuck in academia and printing low quality papers to get a promotion / keep getting another public grant. If you add in to the mix results influenced by the current political climate, what your peers think, what your sponsors want to prove for financial gain, the situation gets bleak very fast. Irreproducible papers are the abandoned OSS projects of software engineers in private tech + corruption + public money, a recipe for disaster. |
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OSS is often someone learning, or who has an itch to scratch, and put some code out there that may or may not solve your problem or work right. The "lack of warranty" clause in most open-source licensing is really important here, because it's largely designed to say "hey, I did a thing but make no guarantees so use at your own risk", whereas a published paper says "hey, a number of experts and people who should know all agree that this is a thoroughly-researched and well-thought-out position, and you can probably consider it to be true (or nearly so) and base some of your decisions on it." I think that change in context is really important to consider when making the analogy here.