Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Online labs can reduce scientific fraud: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Oct, 2014 05:34 AM
    Online video games and remote experiments can combat the rising level of errors and fraud in life sciences research, says a new study co-authored by an Indian-origin researcher.
     
    "Online game-like approach are more scientifically rigorous than the standard practice of scientists proposing an explanation for some phenomenon and then testing that hypothesis through experimentation," explained Rhiju Das, assistant professor of biochemistry from the Stanford University.
     
    "Massive online laboratories today use videogames to engage large numbers of non-professional investigators and prevent scientists from manually testing their own hypotheses," Das noted.
     
    Reporting on the success of their own online lab, Das and assistant professor Adrien Treuille from Carnegie Mellon University wrote about a RNA-design project called EteRNA, which has produced unprecedented design insights that have advanced knowledge of RNA (ribonucleic acid).
     
    "We registered more than 150,000 participants who contributed in excess of two million human-hours to EteRNA. That means there were a lot of eyes, a lot of people looking over each other's shoulders as hypotheses were developed and experimental results evaluated. Everything is out in the open," Treuille explained.
     
    If you strip the game part, projects such as EteRNA present a fundamentally new model of remote science that can prevent many common forms of scientific fraud, Das commented.
     
    Online participants use computer design tools to propose RNA designs that meet certain criteria.
     
    The designs are then synthesized in the Stanford lab of Das.
     
    The results are made available to the entire EteRNA community for analysis and use in future design challenges.
     
    The transparency makes it difficult for any individual to retrospectively adjust scientific hypotheses to match experimental results, or to cherry-pick data to reflect a scientist's biases.
     
    The paper was published in the journal Trends in Biochemical Sciences.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Facebook alters research guidelines

    Facebook alters research guidelines
    After facing global flak over its users' mood study, the social networking site Facebook has given researchers clear guidelines for further research....

    Facebook alters research guidelines

    Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg to visit India next week

    Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg to visit India next week
    His visit comes three months (July, 2014) after the visit of Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of the social networking giant, to the country, which is...

    Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg to visit India next week

    First rechargeable solar battery

    First rechargeable solar battery
    Integrating the function of a solar panel that captures light, and a cheap battery that stores energy into one hybrid device, researchers have successfully...

    First rechargeable solar battery

    New app to promote consensual sex

    New app to promote consensual sex
    In a bid to solve cases of date rape and sexual assault on campus, here comes an app that makes consensual sex as easy as a flick of your finger.

    New app to promote consensual sex

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India
    Microsoft will offer its commercial cloud services -- Azure and Office 365 --by the end of 2015 from local data centres in India where the company sees a $2 trillion business opportunity....

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app
    If you have not tried Instagram's new app for a high-speed selfie to woo your girlfriend, you are definitely missing out on some great action here....

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app

    PrevNext