The good news is that most of the errors occur when researchers interpret the data for submission to a journal, not during
actual experiments in the lab.
Not exact matches
I'm actually considering designing a «scientific»
experiment in my
lab using
actual chemistry instruments to disprove this insanity.
To get to a grip on the
actual data, I spent time
in a
lab performing yeast two - hybrid
experiments.
Combined with a 2005
lab experiment that also showed a resonant frequency could jiggle glass beads
in a fake fault into slipping, this simulation could suggest that
actual faults have specific frequencies they're susceptible to.
In a new twist to online science, researchers have crowdsourced their
experiments by connecting players of a video game to an
actual remote - controlled biochemistry
lab.
In a new twist, researchers have now crowdsourced their
experiments by connecting players of a video game to an
actual biochemistry
lab.
Getting to a paper is a grind — it represents many hours
in lab and many, many failed
experiments, significant data analysis and interpretation, as well as the
actual time spent writing the manuscript and putting together figures and data
in a way that communicates the significance more broadly.
However, even
in that case one would need
actual experiments to verify theoretical expectations, that is, a model that would fit into the
lab.