There is, writes Daniele Fanelli in a recent issue of Nature, something rotten in the state of scientific research—"an epidemic of false, biased, and falsified findings" where "only the most egregious cases of misconduct are discovered and punished." Fanelli is a leading thinker in an increasingly alarming field of scientific research: one that seeks to find out why it is that so much scientific research turns out to be wrong. For a long time the focus has either been on industry funding as a source of bias, particularly in drug research, or on those who deliberately commit fraud, such as the spectacular case of Diederik Stapel, a Dutch social psychologist who was found to have fabricated at least 55 research papers over 20 years. But an increasing number of studies have shown that flawed research is a much wider phenomenon, especially in the biomedical sciences. Indeed, the investigation into Stapel also blamed a "sloppy" research culture that often ignored inconvenient data and misunderstood important statistical methods. "There's little question that the [scientific] literature is awash(充斥着)in false findings—findings that if you try to replicate you'll probably never succeed or at least find them to be different from what was initially said," says Fanelli. "But people don't appreciate that this is not because scientists are manipulating these results, consciously or unconsciously; it's largely because we have a system that favors statistical flukes (侥幸) instead of replicable findings. " This is why, he says, we need to extend the idea of academic misconduct (currently limited to fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism) to "distorted reporting"—the failure to communicate all the information someone would need to validate your findings. Right now, he says, we're missing all the "unconscious biases, the systemic biases... the practices, mistakes, and problems that hardly ever count as cheating, even though they have a very important—and probably the largest—effect on creating technically false results in the literature. " One particularly challenging bias is that academic journals tend to publish only positive results. As Isabelle Boutron, a professor of epidemiology at Ren6 Descartes University in Paris, points out, studies have shown that peer reviewers are influenced by trial results; one study showed that they not only favored a paper showing a positive effect over a near-identical paper showing no effect, they also gave the positive paper higher scores for its scientific methods. And Boutron has herself found extensive evidence of scientists spinning their findings to claim benefits that their actual results didn't quite support. "We need a major cultural change," says Fanelli. "But when you think that, even 20 years ago, these issues were practically never discussed, I think we're making considerable progress."
单选题 Which of the following is true about Fanelli's article in Nature?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:细节题。根据题干锁定文章第一段。文中指出上报的虚假科研发现都是情形最恶劣的,而这些在科研领域已经屡见不鲜。因此正确答案选B。
单选题 What does the word "egregious" in Line 2 Paragraph 1 mean?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:词汇细节题。根据上下文可推断,在所有虚假、偏颇和伪造的研究中,能上报的都是情节最恶劣的、最引人关注的。所以正确答案选D。
单选题 The example of Diederik Stapel is used to________.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】解析:细节题。根据题干中Diederik Stapel锁定文章第二段。文章以戴德里克·斯塔佩尔大案为例,通过具体数据证明研究论文造假现象的猖獗。B、C、D都不符合题意,故答案选A。
单选题 It can be inferred from what Isabelle Boutron has pointed out that________.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:推断题。根据题干中Isabelle Boutron锁定文章第五段。文中指出研究取得积极效果所受到的推崇和评价都比没有结果的高,因此推断前者能吸引更多人员和资金。
单选题 According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:细节题。文章最后法内利坦言虽然我们需要文化大改革,但是总体而言进步很大,说明他对前景还是很乐观的。