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by derbOac
1765 days ago
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From my own experiences this is the tip of the iceberg, but the majority isn't fraud per se, more like questionable research practices that cumulatively amount to something similar. So maybe not making up data, but fishing (either variables, people, or models) until you find the right combination. On top of that are all the misuses of things, that aren't really fishing, but rather use of methods that produce significant findings, but for reasons other than what is assumed. |
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Re-analyzing data 20 times, changing methodologies (median versus mean, handling of outliers, etc.) typically is enough to get an interesting result, and isn't enough to raise alarms. Most people are competent enough to do something like that.
Credit theft is rampant at MIT as well. Financial schemes too. No one does a darned thing about it either.