After claims of high-temp superconductivity were retracted, Ranga Dias lost his university job.
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He'll probably get invited to the Trump administration in charge of Advanced Super Scientific Homeland Organizational Logistics and Efficiency Strategy.Screw that guy. American trust in the scientific community is already at an all-time low, and we do NOT need hacks like him making science look bad. Hope he starts a new career at Walmart or Starbucks.
That's a long walk for very little payoff.He'll probably get invited to the Trump administration in charge of Advanced Super Scientific Homeland Organizational Logistics and Efficiency Strategy.
I understand the desire to strip "dodgy Doctors" of their academic title as a punitive measure for trying to publish shady research. But they still legitimately attained their qualification (assuming the misconduct didn't specifically occur during the process of producing their doctoral research/dissertation). Stripping someone of their right to use "PhD" as a title due to a couple of instances of scientific misconduct sorta feels like the legal equivalent of stripping a tradesperson of their ticket because they were arrested for DUI on the way to a job. It implies that the misconduct is due to a fundamental and irreparable flaw of character rather than simply being a really dumb mistake, and further implies that the person is incapable of realising the error of their ways and is basically just a lost cause at this point. That might be true in some cases, sure, but isn't it better to assume that the person is capable of acknowledging their failings and changing their behaviour?Whether the misconduct is ever regarded as criminal or not, surely institutions can at the very least start revoking their PhD awards so the person involved can no longer call themselves 'Dr.' or represent they have a PhD?
An effort was made, and that's something. It got an "I see what you did there" grin from me.That's a long walk for very little payoff.
I see what you are driving at and I agree, none of this is helpful or good. But I'd also suggest that if you were to approach any random member of "the public" (let's say, a family member or work colleague) and announced yourself with "hey, did you hear about that time Ranga Dias' first paper on room-temperature superconductors which got published in Nature was retracted but then they went ahead and published his second paper anyway, isn't that wild?", you would be greeted with either a blank stare or "What the hell are you talking about mate? Nothing you just said means anything to me".So the end result is, basically, Nature deciding to switch from careful scientific publication to being basically TMZ of "science-like things"? Was that really necessary?
And public will now be even more skeptical of any science. "You said it was all peer reviewed and scientific process applied and end result was still crap"![]()
A legitimate expert in the application of very precise amounts of temperature and pressure might, with a bit of luck, be able to brew a cup of Starbucks coffee that wasn’t completely disgusting.I know why Walmart...but why do you hate Starbucks, for sure their coffee is overroasted, but does it really deserve this level of animosity?.
The research relating to his PhD hasn’t been retracted, so why would his degree be retracted?Whether the misconduct is ever regarded as criminal or not, surely institutions can at the very least start revoking their PhD awards so the person involved can no longer call themselves 'Dr.' or represent they have a PhD?
Periodic injection of internal standards as part of the overall quality assurance program?N-rays, polywater, cold fusion
"Hey, did you know Ivermectin is actually used to treat human microfilarial infestations?"But I'd also suggest that if you were to approach any random member of "the public" (let's say, a family member or work colleague) and announced yourself with "hey, did you hear about that time Ranga Dias' first paper on room-temperature superconductors which got published in Nature was retracted but then they went ahead and published his second paper anyway, isn't that wild?", you would be greeted with either a blank stare or "What the hell are you talking about mate? Nothing you just said means anything to me".
More chance of reinventing the infinite improbability drive. Given the improbable state of the world he (im)probably has.A legitimate expert in the application of very precise amounts of temperature and pressure might, with a bit of luck, be able to brew a cup of Starbucks coffee that wasn’t completely disgusting.
People say it's "all in the beans", but the people who say that usually know fuck-all about how to make a good coffee, like, how it actually works. : )A legitimate expert in the application of very precise amounts of temperature and pressure might, with a bit of luck, be able to brew a cup of Starbucks coffee that wasn’t completely disgusting.
Settle down mate. We can't all be the cool guy who walks away from explosions."Hey, did you know Ivermectin is actually used to treat human microfilarial infestations?"
"What the hell are you talking about mate? It's use to treat COVID. Everyone knows that."
As far as I am concerned the polloi can dig their own graves. I am only up for a can of diesel and a firestarter just to keep the stench down.
No. It's a follow-up paper [1] on the susceptibility of H3S. See preprint here:What paper is that? Lanthanum hydride?
Funny that you should say that: Plagiarism allegations pursue physicist behind stunning superconductivity claimsI understand the desire to strip "dodgy Doctors" of their academic title as a punitive measure for trying to publish shady research. But they still legitimately attained their qualification (assuming the misconduct didn't specifically occur during the process of producing their doctoral research/dissertation).
Now come accusations that Dias plagiarized much of his Ph.D. thesis, completed in 2013 at Washington State University (WSU).
Thanks!No. It's a follow-up paper [1] on the susceptibility of H3S. See preprint here:
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2409.12211
[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-30782-x
At atmospheric pressure and room temperature! Surely that's worth tenure?It turned out to be a paper about super misconductivity.
Huh. Not surprising that getting away with stuff during a PhD might result in a similar attitude to academic publications. It's also a bit concerning that Dias' PhD supervisor spotted his own work in the thesis, but didn't spot the work of others in the field.Funny that you should say that: Plagiarism allegations pursue physicist behind stunning superconductivity claims
Peer reviews ARE a thing. And cheating is way to prevalent for the gate keepers that some slip by (-insert culturally motivated -professor turns the other way for his -cultrually labelled - students whose culture is to steal and/or cheat. I'm in academia and for decades, witness this with some professors actually sharing the stories of their peers allowing cheats to just move on)I think you need to up your standards for douchenozzles a fair bit. That was all pretty tepid.
Hey, now. He would've gotten away with it if it weren't for those meddling grad students, co-authors, colleagues, competitors, and administrators!On-topic: as previously said, this isn't one of those things you can get away with lying about. Everyone in the field is instantly going to try to reproduce this, not least of all because it's a jumping-off point for a whole new avenue of research. If you're rep farming you need something that raises an eyebrow, not mobilizes an entire discipline.
"Ars Technica House!!!!!"Did you ever manage to stick it to that crusty, bitter, old dean?
It's been 50 years since I engaged in any misconduct at the local university (USA), before I attended that university, wherein as three early teens we figured out how to break into the steam tunnels that ran under practically every building, and provided access to the university library where we stole all the Playboy magazines (I kid you not) stored in their "by request only" holdings. Now when later attending that university, I did live for one year in those steam tunnels, but I committed no mischief. The statue of limitations has long passed.It's been thirty years since I was engaged in any misconduct at UR, though that was mostly trying to break into the bomb shelter under the library, jamming up the soda can redemption machines with fake can labels, swearing over the radio during my weekly 3-6am Wednesday morning show, and crashing the university's main undergrad server with my poorly programmed pong game. I don't recall any scientific misconduct, but I can't be sure, it was a long time ago.
I think the border gets pretty fuzzy here. Is it misconduct when you publish conclusions without knowing you had the data to back them up? Maybe? It kind of gets into the state of self-awareness of the person performing the actions.That would be questionable practices, right? The bar for misconduct is higher and implies fraud (or more technically, falsification, fabrication, or plagiarism). The definition of questionable practices is not as well established, but when I trained to become an editor, it included failure to keep lab books and things like that, which leads to mixing up data as you describe. A paper that would be affected by this should (must) be retracted, but without necessarily any sanction or disciplinary action against the person. It's not fraud, just incompetence.
Scientific misconduct is generally defined to include simply failing to abide by the standards and practices for your given field. I cannot think of a field where it is considered standard to knowingly not have the data necessary to back up your conclusions.I think the border gets pretty fuzzy here. Is it misconduct when you publish conclusions without knowing you had the data to back them up? Maybe? It kind of gets into the state of self-awareness of the person performing the actions.
This is slightly off topic, but as luck would have it my son is in the midst of applying to colleges and near the top of his list is the UR program in cognitive science/psychology. Is this clown professor an anomaly there? Is the rest of the school reputable? I am more familiar with west coast schools, but we toured RIT and liked the city of Rochester.Grade A douchenozzle I'll accept, I was a young college kid. Incompetent? Nah, I graduated with high honors in the fledgling cognitive science department while dual majoring in psychology, and was the highest paid undergrad student, working for the university computing center's Unix Group administrating many of the school's workstations.
You know how many times a physics professor was deriving something for us on the board, and it may as well have said that in the middle? I usually understood what he was saying in the moment (or thought I did) and then an hour later was already thinking "wait, how did he do that, again?"Reminds me of this Sydney Harris cartoon.
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I think people who do stuff like this manage to lie to others without fearing the consequences by very successfully lying to themselves as well. Something like "These readings are definitely showing I'm on the right track. it's essentially right already; the practical synthesis steps are just really, really tricky to get precisely just-so. I just need better funding for more time and better equipment to get it done perfectly, and once I get all the needed funding and iron everything out, everyone seeing the success will be too celebratory to closely examine these little snags along the way."Dude just hoping that nobody would ever try the thing?
The frauds know they’re frauds.I think people who do stuff like this manage to lie to others without fearing the consequences by very successfully lying to themselves as well. Something like "These readings are definitely showing I'm on the right track. it's essentially right already; the practical synthesis steps are just really, really tricky to get precisely just-so. I just need better funding for more time and better equipment to get it done perfectly, and once I get all the needed funding and iron everything out, everyone seeing the success will be too celebratory to closely examine these little snags along the way."
So you may always think (after all, the average con artist does know they're lying), but in a case like this, if there isn't some measure of self-delusion involved, you're left with the conundrum 50me12 pointed out: How could they possibly expect to keep the fraud going rather than ending up fired and humiliated like this guy, when making a claim which there would obviously be massive efforts to replicate?The frauds know they’re frauds.
Ha! Same here!I don't run into many fellow UR grads anywhere...
My primary misconduct at UR was sneaking up onto the roof of the library late at night.