Peter Lawrence is a Professor at the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, UK. He has worked on various aspects of fruit fly development for almost 40 years. Readers may know him as one of the authors of Wolpert's Principles of Development or as the author of The Making of a Fly.
Peter is a very smart guy. He thinks a lot about the "big picture" and not just the minutiae of day-to-day work in a competitive environment. That's why his article in this month's issue of Current Biology is worth reading. Lawrence writes about what's wrong with modern science [The Mismeasure of Science].
For most scientists, there won't be any revelations in the article but it's put together well and covers all the bases. The main point is that today's scientists have to worry far too much about "productivity" in order to get funded. The system is geared towards artificial measurements of research success that may, or may not, reward creativity and innovation.
Modern science, particularly biomedicine, is being damaged by attempts to measure the quantity and quality of research. Scientists are ranked according to these measures, a ranking that impacts on funding of grants, competition for posts and promotion. The measures seemed, at first rather harmless, but, like cuckoos in a nest, they have grown into monsters that threaten science itself. Already, they have produced an “audit society” [2] in which scientists aim, and indeed are forced, to put meeting the measures above trying to understand nature and disease.You need to read the full article to get all the details.
The journals are evaluated according to impact factors, and scientists and departments assessed according to the impact factors of the journals they publish in. Consequently, over the last twenty years a scientist's primary aim has been downgraded from doing science to producing papers and contriving to get them into the “best” journals they can [3]. Now there is a new trend: the idea is to rank scientists by the numbers of citations their papers receive. Consequently, I predict that citation-fishing and citation-bartering will become major pursuits.
So, what can we do about it? It's an old complaint, one that's been openly discussed even since I first met Peter Lawrence back in the mid-1970's. If a bunch of (relatively) smart scientists can't figure out how to fix the problem then maybe it's unfixable.
Here's where I think Lawrence drops the ball. He proposes the same tired old "remedies" that we've never adopted in the past in spite of the fact that we all pay lip service to their benefits. He wants us all to pay attention to "quality" and "originality" over quantity. He wants us to be more careful about putting authors names on a paper. He wants a code of ethics for scientists. He wants to reform the peer review process in the leading journals. None of this is going to happen as long as money is tight and the granting agencies have to come up with defensible policies for turning down 75% of grant applications.
The short term solution is to put more money into the grant system and to stop hiring more scientists. The long term solution is to look for better ways of funding. I like the idea of giving large block grants to departments and letting the researchers divide it up as they see fit. This would have worked well in any department I've been in but I hear horror stories about other departments.
[Photo Credit: The photograph of Peter Lawrence is from his website at the University of Cambridge (Peter A. Lawrence]
Lawrence, P.A. (2007) The mismeasurement of science. Current Biology 17:R583-R585.
Is restricted access publication listed as one of the things wrong with science? I'd check myself, but that article is behind a $30 pay-wall.
ReplyDeleteIt's available for free here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dcscience.net/lawrence-current-biology-2007.pdf
If research productivity was the main driver in getting funds, I'd be OK with that, despite the problems outlined by Lawrence.
ReplyDeleteIn my shop, however (a government lab), funds are distributed more on the basis of what area you are researching and less on the basis of generation of publications. A colleague across the hall has funds to support several students and tech staff, even though her productivity has been abysmal. I find that quite discouraging.
This is very reminiscent of a programme screened on BBC TV called “The Trap”. (see wiki). This program:
ReplyDelete“…described how the Clinton administration gave in to market theorists in the US and how New Labour in the UK decided to measure everything it could, the better to improve it, introducing artificial and unmeasurable targets….” (From wiki)
The conceptual background is Adam Smith, Games Theory, Hayek and complex system theory in general. However, it is difficult see how metrics can act as useful “organizing” incentives in the scientific profession, a profession that is necessarily skewed away from the routine toward the unknown and the unexpected. How do you measure the productivity of explorers? ‘Good luck’ is often rewarded, but we surely can’t learn how to be lucky and have it reinforced with incentives. If you’re on a winning streak it doesn’t mean that you’re ‘getting better at it’.
Over thirty years ago, I published a book with the title "What's Wrong with Science?". In it, and in many later publications, I argue that the main thing wrong with science is the philosophy of science that most scientists take for granted. This has adverse implications for science itself, but much more serious adverse implications for other human endeavours that might learn fruitfully from a more accurate view about the aims and methods, the philosophy, of science. The argument is spelled out in my website:
ReplyDeletewww.nick-maxwell,demon.co.uk. The issues I raise are related to what Peter Lawrence finds wrong with science.
Hey Larry, I think this WP article about private-sector publishers rallying against open-access publication relates, in some way anyway, to this article.
ReplyDeleteSpread the word.