It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by bsl4doc
I hope this is true. Unfortunately, I have been very skeptical of Korean research ever since the famed falsified stem cell research incident last year. The push to be first in research regardless of standards seems top be endemic in their science programs.
Mariella
Originally posted by sardion2000
Originally posted by bsl4doc
I hope this is true. Unfortunately, I have been very skeptical of Korean research ever since the famed falsified stem cell research incident last year. The push to be first in research regardless of standards seems top be endemic in their science programs.
Mariella
Remember, the guy who faked those Stem Cell results went from National Hero to National Disgrace in a fairly short period of time. Something like this wouldn't be too hard to verify and it would be extremely stupid of them to fabricate something like this directly on the heels of that Stem Cell fiasco.
You also have to take into account that TWO of the fake studies were published in a prominent journal, I believe it was Science if I'm not mistaken. Could be, though.
How do we know this isn't more of the same?
Originally posted by sardion2000
You also have to take into account that TWO of the fake studies were published in a prominent journal, I believe it was Science if I'm not mistaken. Could be, though.
Thanks for that. My basic point is that you can go and say just about the same exact thing about any Country or University who's hosted a corrupt Scientist. Does publishing a paper with fabricated data hit at Science's credibility? Not in my mind, because approximately 1 in 10 papers are the equivalent to Junk Science. Either they are Fraud Junk Science or they are Failed Science which just turned about to be Junk after being proven incorrect.
How do we know this isn't more of the same?
How do we know other major papers from other countries aren't more of the same either? Such a practice is, unfortunately wide spread when it comes to Government Research Grants. That money always comes with strings attached. The only true litmus test we can do is peer review replication, which is kind of the point of publishing isn't it?
``Obviously, it is an innovative finding. But we need to see whether or not CGK733 could really rejuvenate cells inside human bodies without generating side effects,’’
This compound was identified by a high-throughput phenotypic screen with automated imaging. Employing a magnetic nanoprobe technology, magnetism-based interaction capture (MAGIC)3,