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    Sara S's Avatar
    Sara S
    Auntie Wacco

    The Truth Wears Off

    from delancyplace.com:

    "On September 18, 2007, a few dozen neuroscientists, psychiatrists, and drug-company
    executives gathered in a hotel conference room in Brussels to hear some startling
    news. It had to do with a class of drugs known as atypical or second-generation
    antipsychotics, which came on the market in the early nineties. The drugs, sold
    under brand names such as Abilify, Seroquel, and Zyprexa, had been tested on schizophrenics
    in several large clinical trials, all of which had demonstrated a dramatic decrease
    in the subjects' psychiatric symptoms. As a result, second-generation antipsychotics
    had become one of the fastest-growing and most profitable pharmaceutical classes.
    By 2001, Eli Lilly's Zyprexa was generating more revenue than Prozac. It remains
    the company's top-selling drug.
    "But the data presented at the Brussels meeting made it clear that something strange
    was happening: the therapeutic power of the drugs appeared to be steadily waning.
    A recent study showed an effect that was less than half of that documented in the
    first trials, in the early nineteen-nineties. Many researchers began to argue that
    the expensive pharmaceuticals weren't any better than first-generation antipsychotics,
    which have been in use since the fifties. 'In fact, sometimes they now look even
    worse,' John Davis, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Illinois at
    Chicago, told me.
    "Before the effectiveness of a drug can be confirmed, it must be tested and tested
    again. Different scientists in different labs need to repeat the protocols and publish
    their results. The test of replicability, as it's known, is the foundation of modern
    research. Replicability is how the community enforces itself. It's a safeguard for
    the creep of subjectivity. Most of the time, scientists know what results they want,
    and that can influence the results they get. The premise of replicability is that
    the scientific community can correct for these flaws.
    "But now all sorts of well-established, multiply confirmed findings have started
    to look increasingly uncertain. It's as if our facts were losing their truth: claims
    that have been enshrined in textbooks are suddenly unprovable. This phenomenon doesn't
    yet have an official name, but it's occurring across a wide range of fields, from
    psychology to ecology. In the field of medicine, the phenomenon seems extremely
    widespread, affecting not only antipsychotics but also therapies ranging from cardiac
    stents to Vitamin E and antidepressants: Davis has a forthcoming analysis demonstrating
    that the efficacy of antidepressants has gone down as much as threefold in recent
    decades.
    For many scientists, the effect is especially troubling because of what it exposes
    about the scientific process. If replication is what separates the rigor of science
    from the squishiness of pseudoscience, where do we put all these rigorously validated
    findings that can no longer be proved? Which results should we believe? Francis
    Bacon, the early-modern philosopher and pioneer of the scientific method, once declared
    that experiments were essential, because they allowed us to 'put nature to the question.'
    But it appears that nature often gives us different answers. ...
    "[Joseph Banks Rhine, a psychologist at Duke, came to call this trend toward a reduction
    in the strength of proof for a theory he had developed in the early nineteen-thirties]
    the 'decline effect.'
    "According to John Ioannidis, an epidemiologist at Stanford University, the main
    problem is that too many researchers engage in what he calls 'significance chasing,'
    or finding ways to interpret the data so that it passes the statistical test of
    significance - the ninety-five-per-cent boundary invented by Ronald Fisher. 'The
    scientists are so eager to pass this magical test that they start playing around
    with the numbers, trying to find anything that seems worthy,' Ioannidis says. In
    recent years, Ioannidis has become increasingly blunt about the pervasiveness of
    the problem. One of his most cited papers has a deliberately provocative title:
    'Why Most Published Research Findings Are False.'
    "The problem of selective reporting is rooted in a fundamental cognitive flaw, which
    is that we like proving ourselves right and hate being wrong. 'It feels good to
    validate a hypothesis,' Ioannidis said. 'It feels even better when you've got a
    financial interest in the idea or your career depends upon it. And that's why, even
    after a claim has been systematically disproven' - he cites, for instance, the early
    work on hormone replacement therapy, or claims involving various vitamins - 'you
    still see some stubborn researchers citing the first few studies that show a strong
    effect. They really want to believe that it's true.' ...
    "The disturbing implication of a study [conducted in the late nineteen-nineties
    by John Crabbe, a neuroscientist at the Oregon Health and Science University] is
    that a lot of extraordinary scientific data are nothing but noise. The problem,
    of course, is that ... dramatic findings are ... the most likely to get published
    in prestigious journals, since the data are both statistically significant and entirely
    unexpected. Grants get written, follow-up studies are conducted. The end result
    is a scientific accident that can take years to unravel.
    "This suggests that the decline effect is actually a decline of illusion. While
    Karl Popper imagined falsification occurring with a single, definitive experiment
    - Galileo refuted Aristotelian mechanics in an afternoon - the process turns out
    to be much messier than that. Many scientific theories continue to be considered
    true even after failing numerous experimental tests. Verbal overshadowing might
    exhibit the decline effect, but it remains extensively relied upon within the field.
    The same holds for any number of phenomena, from the disappearing benefits of second-generation
    antipsychotics to the weak coupling ratio exhibited by decaying neutrons, which
    appears to have fallen by more than ten standard deviations between 1969 and 2001....
    "Such anomalies demonstrate the slipperiness of empiricism. Although many scientific
    ideas generate conflicting results and suffer from falling effect sizes, they continue
    to get cited in the textbooks and drive standard medical practice. Why? Because
    these ideas seem true. Because they make sense. Because we can't bear to let them
    go. And this is why the decline effect is so troubling. Not because it reveals the
    human fallibility of science, in which data are tweaked and beliefs shape perceptions.
    (Such shortcomings aren't surprising, at least for scientists.) And not because
    it reveals that many of our most exciting theories are fleeting fads and will soon
    be rejected. (That idea has been around since Thomas Kuhn.) The decline effect is
    troubling because it reminds us how difficult it is to prove anything. We like to
    pretend that our experiments define the truth for us. But that's often not the case.
    Just because an idea is true doesn't mean it can be proved. And just because an
    idea can be proved doesn't mean it's true. When the experiments are done, we still
    have to choose what to believe."
    Author: Jonah Lehrer
    Title: "The Truth Wears Off"
    Publisher: The New Yorker
    Date: December 13, 2010
    Pages: 52-57
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