|
|
|
|
|
by mft_
951 days ago
|
|
(Late back to this but) It's far more skewed than you're making out. That the a-beta hypothesis is true, is/was the vastly dominant prevailing belief in the field, to the extent that it hasn't been a question that many 'experts' were willing to meaningfully address. To be clear: for decades, researchers wishing to pursue lines of inquiry contrary to the a-beta hypothesis struggled for traction and funding, and saw their careers struggle as a result[0]. As such, trying to disprove the a-beta hypothesis was not the core research question for many/most, for long time. [0] https://www.statnews.com/2019/06/25/alzheimers-cabal-thwarte... |
|
> A top journal told one that it would not publish her paper because others hadn’t.
Oh the horror, not getting published in a top journal! Turns out that most good science gets published outside the top journals.
This sort of behavior is bad, and has always been part of the process, and may actually be better today than it was a century ago, as the clubs are not nearly so tight as they were back then.
Early in my career I remember reading some of ET Jaynes' (an early Bayesian reasoning guy) discussions of his early career, and how he had to very very carefully choose his topics so that he wouldn't upset the big personalities in physics and thereby have his entire career crushed. It's better these days than it was then!
There will be sour grapes about funding, just as there are when VCs all jump on the hype train for the same idea, but my only scientific exposure to the amyloid hypothesis for the past 20 years has been in terms of it being an unproven hypothesis. Starting down exploratory routes for explanatory hypotheses should have been pursued, and was pursued, and will continue to be pursued, but the question of "how much" is exceptionally difficult to answer.
Perhaps I'm biased from being in Science too long, but I've seen so many sensational Stat News article that never pan out when pushed upon. I wouldn't trust them at all with stuff like this.