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By:

Dr. Kishore Paknikar

29 January 2025 at 2:43:00 pm

How Scientists Should Publish

AI generated image Every profession has its own measure of success. A lawyer wins a case. An entrepreneur builds a company. An athlete breaks a record. A scientist, however, succeeds in a rather unusual way. A scientist succeeds by becoming less certain. That may sound paradoxical. Yet the history of science is nothing but a history of changing minds. The Earth ceased to be the center of the universe. Diseases stopped being blamed on bad air. Ulcers were no longer attributed simply to stress....

How Scientists Should Publish

AI generated image Every profession has its own measure of success. A lawyer wins a case. An entrepreneur builds a company. An athlete breaks a record. A scientist, however, succeeds in a rather unusual way. A scientist succeeds by becoming less certain. That may sound paradoxical. Yet the history of science is nothing but a history of changing minds. The Earth ceased to be the center of the universe. Diseases stopped being blamed on bad air. Ulcers were no longer attributed simply to stress. Every major scientific advance has required someone to say, “The evidence suggests we were wrong.” Science is perhaps the only human enterprise in which changing one's mind after seeing better evidence is considered a virtue rather than a weakness. That simple principle also explains how scientists should publish. In my last two articles, I explored why scientists publish and where they should publish. The first argued that research is published not merely to advance careers but to advance knowledge. The second suggested that the real question is not which journal carries the greatest prestige, but where a discovery can make the greatest difference. The final question is perhaps the most important: How should scientists publish? The obvious answer is procedural: conduct research, analyse the results, write the paper, submit it, revise after peer review, and celebrate acceptance. But publishing is far more than an administrative milestone. It is the moment private observations become public knowledge, and every scientist makes an unspoken promise to the reader: this is the truth, as faithfully as it has been discovered and reported. That promise is the invisible foundation of science. There is an instructive episode from the history of science. In 1989, two chemists announced that they had achieved cold fusion at room temperature, a discovery that promised virtually limitless clean energy. The news travelled around the world before the scientific community had an opportunity to examine the evidence. Laboratories everywhere rushed to reproduce the results. Most failed. Within months, the extraordinary claim had largely collapsed because it could not withstand independent scrutiny. The episode was embarrassing for those involved, but it also demonstrated something remarkable. Science ultimately trusted evidence more than excitement. Inconvenient Truths An honest scientific paper does not try to prove that the author was right. It tries to show what the evidence says, even when the evidence is inconvenient. It distinguishes observation from interpretation, fact from speculation and confidence from certainty. It acknowledges limitations instead of hiding them. It reports methods clearly enough for others to examine, question and, wherever possible, reproduce the work. Good scientific writing is therefore not an exercise in persuasion but an exercise in transparency. Importantly, honesty enters a paper long before the first sentence is written. It begins while framing the research question, designing the experiment and recording the observations. Weak experiments cannot be rescued by elegant English. Sophisticated statistics cannot compensate for poor data. Attractive figures cannot replace careful thinking. The integrity of a publication is determined as much in the laboratory and the field as on the author’s computer. Most people imagine scientific misconduct as spectacular fraud: fabricated data, manipulated images or plagiarism. These certainly damage science and deserve the strongest condemnation. Yet the greater danger often lies elsewhere. It lies in the countless small compromises that gradually distance a paper from reality. An inconvenient result is quietly omitted. A doubtful experiment is repeated until the desired outcome appears. A preliminary observation is described as a breakthrough. A possibility becomes a promise. Every individual step may appear harmless. Collectively, they can mislead an entire field. The temptation to exaggerate deserves particular attention. A paper may contain no false statement and yet leave the reader with an entirely false impression. A successful laboratory experiment suddenly appears in headlines as the cure for a disease. Results obtained in animals are reported as though human treatments are just around the corner. Press releases often amplify these claims because dramatic discoveries attract attention. Scientists owe society not only accurate data but also accurate expectations. Credibility is lost as much through exaggeration as through fabrication. Not all the pressures come from individual scientists. The scientific ecosystem itself sometimes rewards the wrong behaviour. Universities count publications. Promotion committees count citations. Funding agencies seek measurable outputs. Rankings compare institutions using publication metrics. Researchers are therefore encouraged to produce more papers, preferably in prestigious journals. The system publicly praises originality but often privately rewards productivity. Scientific integrity is tested not only by the courage to report inconvenient results but also by the courage to report results that may disappoint colleagues, sponsors or even one's own expectations. If we wish to improve scientific publishing, we must improve not only scientists but also the incentives under which they work. Genuine Contributions Authorship is another test of scientific character. A scientist’s name should signify responsibility rather than status. Every listed author should have made a genuine intellectual contribution and should be willing to stand behind the work. Equally, young researchers who have done much of the work deserve proper recognition regardless of their position in the academic hierarchy. Authorship is not a ceremonial honour. It is a declaration of accountability. The same principle applies to peer review. Although imperfect, peer review remains science's most effective mechanism for improving the quality of published work. A conscientious reviewer does not ask whether the paper supports personal beliefs or benefits professional rivals. The only relevant question is whether the evidence justifies the conclusions. Good reviewers strengthen papers even when they recommend rejection. Their loyalty is to the scientific record, not to individual authors. One of science’s greatest strengths is its ability to correct itself. Honest mistakes are inevitable. What distinguishes science from many other human activities is not that it avoids mistakes, but that it possesses mechanisms to recognise and correct them. A scientist who openly acknowledges an error protects the credibility of science far more than one who quietly allows an incorrect conclusion to persist. Correcting the scientific record is not a sign of failure. It is evidence that science is functioning exactly as it should. There is another truth that scientists sometimes forget. A published paper is complete; science never is. Every paper captures the best understanding available at a particular moment, but it is never the final word. Somewhere in the future, another experiment may refine it, qualify it or even overturn it. Every scientific paper therefore carries an invisible footnote: This is our present understanding. Better evidence may improve it tomorrow. That humility is not a weakness of science. It is its greatest strength. New Dimension Artificial intelligence has added a new dimension to scientific publishing. Used wisely, it can improve language, analyse data, detect image manipulation and navigate vast scientific literature. Used carelessly, it can produce convincing prose, fabricated references and an illusion of scholarship without evidence. AI can help scientists write papers; it cannot take responsibility for them. The simplest test of scientific publishing is whether another researcher would trust a paper enough to build on it. Science advances like a relay race: every discovery becomes the starting point for the next. Every inaccurate paper wastes time, resources and sometimes lives. Every honest one, whether celebrated or forgotten, quietly strengthens the foundations of future discovery. Why scientists publish tells us their purpose. Where scientists publish determines who can benefit from their discoveries. How scientists should publish determines whether those discoveries deserve to be believed. In the end, every scientific paper asks its readers for something precious: trust. That trust cannot be conferred by an editor, an impact factor or the prestige of a journal. It is earned by intellectual honesty, humility and respect for evidence. Scientific publishing is one of civilization’s ways of preserving trustworthy knowledge, correcting its own mistakes and passing understanding from one generation to the next. Knowledge may begin in a laboratory, but it enters civilization only through trust. (The writer is an ANRF Prime Minister Professor at COEP Technological University, Pune, and former Director of the Agharkar Research Institute, Pune. Views personal.)

Bad Roads, Ugly Politics


The pathetic state of roads in Mumbai city as well as its suburbs has made daily commute a dangerous affair. The residents are miffed with the BMC over its lackadaisical attitude. Mumbaikars tweet photos, post videos to grab attention, but everything is in vain. Who cares for the common people. Backbreaking journeys have become part and parcel of life. Political leaders are busy mud-slinging.


This year the monsoon took a break after almost four and half months. During this time some of the roads virtually became non commutable. It may be recalled that the Chief Minister Eknath Shinde first announced to make Mumbai roads pothole free.


Its almost two years now the BMC has concretised only 9 percent of roads it planned to concretise. This decision was taken when it came to light that due to the properties of bitumen in asphalt roads, potholes are a regular occurrence due to contact with water during monsoons.


Hence, to solve the problem of potholes, the corporation has adopted a policy of cement concreting of 6-meter-wide roads in phases. The decision was taken but the dilly-dallying affair made things more difficult.


Mumbai’s traffic does put a lot of strain on roads which is not the case in the other developed countries. Second most important aspect is concretisation of roads is done partly and in phases.


The worst problem which is faced is repeated digging for cables and drainage, which weakens the roads. Above all corruption in BMC makes matters worse as a result everything comes to grinding halt.


According to experts, repairing potholes is a reaction with symptomatic treatment. By and large we are dispensing superficial treatment without addressing the root cause. The long-term solution will be to have roads with no potholes but what we need is the means and technology to achieve this. But for this political will is necessary which we lack on every step.


Mumbaikar’s are convience that corruption in the municipal corporation is the main reason. Contractors have had a monopoly over the last 20 years and this is the reason why reputed companies never come ahead for these projects.


As a result, in the name of attendance and repair, the BMC does shoddy work. Crores are spent but the end result is nothing. The BMC is not paying attention to the crust. If the crust is weak, potholes will see an increase. Without any thought or technical know-how, potholes are filled with cold mix.


This is the reason why the city and suburbs continue to have craters on the roads.


Craters, a serious threat to the safety and security of people. Mumbaikars fade up from their repeated visits to orthopedic surgeons.


They are in a mood to teach a proper lesson to those who were at the helm of the affairs.

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