Updated: Mon, 02/17/2025 - 09:58

For Feb.17, due to the storm, McGill teaching and work must be done remotely. Classes that cannot be done remotely will be cancelled. Labs and evaluations will be rescheduled, as appropriate. Only the McLennan Library is open for study (see hours). All other libraries are closed for the day.


Pour le 17 février, en raison de la tempête, l'enseignement et le travail à McGill doivent être effectués à distance. Les cours qui ne peuvent être effectués à distance seront annulés. Les laboratoires et les évaluations seront reportés, en fonction des besoins. Seule la bibliothèque McLennan est ouverte pour l'étude (voir horaires). Toutes les autres bibliothèques sont fermées pour la journée.

Event

Science and Skepticism: Critiquing Bad Research in an Anti-Science Era

Monday, March 19, 2018 13:00to16:00
Faculty Club 3450 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 0E5, CA
Price: 
FREE

Speakers

Steven Goodman, Professor of Medicine and co-founder and co-director of the Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS)
Richard Harris, Science Correspondent, National Public Radio
Philippe Ravaud, Professor of Epidemiology, Paris Descartes University

Description

The past decade has witnessed growing skepticism of scientific research, from two very different sources. On one hand, scientists themselves have turned a skeptical eye on the reliability and utility of scientific research. Meta-researchers – scientists who study science – have exposed serious, systemic problems in health research, including inadequate or poor study design and analysis, perverse professional and economic incentives, and publication practices leading to bias and waste. On the other hand, ‘merchants of doubt’ including tobacco companies, climate-change deniers, and anti-vaccinationists mobilize pseudo-skepticism to increase uncertainty about health research in the service of economic self-interests or preconceived political ideologies. The election of Donald Trump, who has nominated climate-change and vaccine skeptics to senior positions in his administration, indicates the power of anti-science in contemporary North America.

This symposium, which features leaders in meta-research and a respected science journalist, will ask and answer a key question raised by these two trends: how do we expose and improve on bad research practices, without abetting the forces of anti-science? 

RSVP REQUIRED

 

A symposium sponsored by McGill University’s Biomedical Ethics Unit and Dept. of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health
Supported by a Gift from the McGill Medicine Class of 1970

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