
However, all that was thrown into question on Monday by an article in the New York Times: Difficulties in Defining Errors in Case Against Harvard Researcher. The author, respected science journalist Nicholas Wade, writes that there's more to the story than first appeared, and specifically, that Hauser may not have fabricated data, instead being the victim of an innocent (if serious) mistake:
[A paper Hauser recently retracted], published in 2002, reported that rhesus monkeys can distinguish a novel string of sounds from a control sequence, an issue which has important bearing on their capacity for language. The novel and control sound sequences must be alternated... But the video of the experiment contains only novel sequences.Wade also quoted two former students of Hauser's who praised his "unimpeachable scientific integrity” and who said his critics were “scholars known to be virulently opposed to his research program”, and quotes an anonymous Harvard academic as saying the investigation was "lawyer-driven", unnecessarily long, and unfair to Hauser.
Critics like Dr. Altmann at first charged that the controls had never been done, and that since control conditions are reported in the paper, they must have been concocted. But Altmann... now says his earlier accusation was “heavily dependent on the knowledge that Harvard found Professor Hauser guilty of misconduct.” When he gave the issue further thought, he saw an alternative explanation.In the experimental setup, the monkey is in a soundproof box. The researchers can see the computer is playing a sound but cannot hear it. What could have happened is that the computer, through a programming error, substituted a second test sound for the control sounds, and the researchers, unaware of the problem, wrote up their report assuming the control sounds had been played...
Even so, it is far from clear how the data on the video led to the reported results. This would be a devastating error, but not fraud. “It is conceivable that the data were not fabricated, but rather that the experiment was set up wrong, and that nobody realized this until after it was published,” Dr. Altmann wrote.
But yesterday Gerry Altmann, the Editor of the journal Cognition which published the retracted paper, hit back against Wade in a blog post, saying that Wade "selectively quoted" him to give the impression that he'd backtracked from his earlier conclusion that Hauser falsified the data.
...there has been no stepping back. As I make very clear... the information I have received, when taken at face value, leads me to maintain my belief that the data that had been published in the journal Cognition was effectively a fiction - that is, there was no basis in the recorded data for those data. I concluded, and I continue to conclude, that the data were most likely fabricated...Essentially, Altmann says that while in theory Hauser could have made an innocent mistake, Harvard's investigation specifically ruled out this and concluded that no innocent explanation was possible.
It is true that I did write here that there existed an alternative explanation for what happened, based on a sequence of errors. However, for that interpretation to be correct ... the information I had been given, by Harvard’s Dean, would have to have been incorrect.
So at the end of the day, it comes down to this: Do I believe what the Dean [of Harvard] told me were the results of a long, careful, and painstaking investigation, or do I simply make up a “Just So Story” instead?...What are we to make of all this? The issue is extremely important - the "fabrication" of data in the Cognition paper was the most serious allegation against Hauser, and (to my knowledge) the only thing which proved that his misconduct was deliberate as opposed to sloppy.
This entire saga is about the misrepresentation of truth. It is ironic that the journalists who profess to expose truth place such little value in it.
The crucial question therefore is whether the Harvard investigation was right to rule out an innocent explanation of the Cognition data. Altmann correctly says that either Harvard are wrong, or Hauser falsified data.
But the problem is that the details of Harvard's judgement remain private. So we (including Altmann) seem to be left with a question of whether to trust Harvard University and their internal investigation.
21 comments:
Oh wow the plot thickens. If there really was misconduct which I still doubt, Harvard could've easily covered it up. The question is which Republican needed to score points, but most likely someone distinguished in Harvard really don't like him and may've had the connections to cajole the benefits of splishsplashing public bonanza evolution a lie! A lie!
Smells like a domestic squabble, tarnish his reputation. You know those who really shouldn't be in the academia, and no matter how much they try they don't have the 'it' factor. Maybe it was the head of school, couldn't be a colleague, definitely someone higher up the ranks. Obviously their tight-conservative-ass didn't like the Chomsky connection perhaps. Awesome analysis! :)
I'm surprised veri is taken in by the Wade NYT stody because it is a pile of crap planted by Alan Dershowitz's team of lawyers.
Each person's quote is cherry-picked and excruciatingly massaged to show Hauser in the best light possible.
It is very artfully done with paid "expert ethicists" (sort of like the defense team's expert witnesses in a criminal trial) who are lined up to say mildly favorable things and to offer up "hypothetical" scenarios where Hauser did no wrong.
Wade was served up the whole piece on a platter....This version (that there may be, in some "Just So" story-land be another, benign explanation for Hauser's fraudulent mistakes) is a kind of closing statement by the defense... Run without presenting any of the truly damning evidence that Harvard has collected. The whole thing is a set-piece for the gullible.
The problem is, anonymous, that everything's behind the scenes. Harvard may well have lots of "truly damning evidence", I'd hope so because otherwise they were wrong to find Hauser guilty - but the rest of us on the outside have nothing but their word to go on.
Anon I don't agree with you. If Harvard did have damning evidence why go public about it? They would've negotiated under the table. As in quietly sacked or transferred him to another institution. That's what politicians frequently do. But it seems they or someone was out to ruin his reputation. Even if he wins the case, he's already lost. This incident will stay with him for the rest of his career.
It's clear there was a deliberate attempt to make it public for whatever reason. Personally I believe Hauser is innocent. You either have integrity or you don't. Has this happened before? Is he known for misconduct? The man admires Chomsky need I say more? ?
What would he have gained from fudging data? He could've easily have changed the hypotheses. It's a much easier alternative than making data up. Did he ever debunk those scientists who found contrarian evidence to his findings?
The very little evidence I've read in the media accusing Hauser of fraudulent beh. seem like straws. I think that's really all the cherry evidence they have, hence the public showcase. I'd imagine Hauser would have a more powerful defense in the lines of, he's published over 200 journal articles, conducted goodness knows how many experiments, if fraudulent beh. was such a habit, how come the other ones are fine? I'm assuming scientists are entitled to occasional mistakes, hell medical doctors are, so why did they go public about it? undermine his whole life's career? I hope he makes it through what looks to be a hellish ordeal.
Veri, In order to understand the Hauser affair, you have to keep in mind the role played by Dershowitz and his associates. Hauser's lawyers are the ones who have made this into a hidden, drawn out affair. They have stonewalled at every turn and dragged out the inquiry, with objections to minor procedural points taking years to resolve.
Hauser's lawyers have also prevented any negative evidence from the internal deliberations from finding the light of day on pain of lawsuit.
Because of the Dershowitz legal team, the (mostly junior) people who testified internally and who actually KNOW the true extent of the misconduct have found themselves in a vacuum: there has been no public acknowledgment of Hauser's situation by Harvard, nor was their likely to be for many years, because of Dershowitz' delay tactics.
These junior people, some of whom have left science, are the ones who ultimately couldn't follow the code of omerta and began to talk. And Dershowitz couldn't do anything to these little people because unlike the Harvard deans, they had no assets to sue or careers to derail.
>"It's clear there was a deliberate >attempt to make it public for >whatever reason."
Veri I hope this clarifies some of the disclosures of information that have taken place and helps you see that there has been no conspiracy by Harvard-higher-ups (who are famous for their gutlessness)
One more point.
It might be useful to think of Hauser's legal defense team as the functional equivalent of the OJ team (ie working furiously, promoting self-evidently spurious arguments to prevent truth from emerging).
And, also, to keep in mind, the evidence that you've heard about in the public arena is the stuff that the defense team has allowed to be revealed.
As long as most of what we know either comes from anonymous blog posters an dueling newspaper articles (in the case of the Times's Wade, he's been dueling with himself), we will have competing narratives before us -- all of them titillating to those who care, none of them verifiable.
Your narrative is very interesting and maybe even plausible. But is it true? You'll say yes, and someone else will say no. And the reader has no way to tell until the facts come out in some verifiable, reasonably complete forum.
My major reason for doubt is the bit about Dershowitz. No crime to hire a lawyer, and it's a lawyer's job to do whatever it takes to protect the client. But if Hauer really had Dershowitz working for him, and if Dershowitz were truly the reason we don't know the facts, wouldn't Wade or one of the other reporters hot on Hauser's trail have made *some* mention of this?
Also, Dershowitz is on the faculty of the Harvard Law School. Would he really serve Hauser's lawyer, defending him against their mutual employer?
I'm sorry but I still don't buy it. If what you're saying is correct, then all this may've been a PR stunt by Hauser + Harvard for whatever reason. I see that you defend Harvard but I hope you do realise they're heavily involved in political matters and by far considered one of the most corrupt academic institutions in the world. Sorry.
If they were on Hauser's side, they would've settled by now. In reality students have no power, no money, no time to be putting up a case. Obviously the accuser has to be the gutless folks who sent the retraction so readily to Cognition. But Hauser is not a stupid man, by hiring D, he has certainly demonstrated he has friends too.
Let me also add in the corporate setting they don't sack big personalities, they pressure them to quit or retire. My guess is the weird tangent Hauser has gone in the academia unsettled some people. He was hired as a scientist not for his political somewhat naive conceptions of evil or the thoughts associated with it. Anyway..
To better understand how difficult it is for a student to challenge the academic competancy of an academic, you may want to attend a campus senate proceeding. Although the faculty technically represents the student, it ultimately boils down to the student to present the case. There is no way these students would've seen the light of day with Hauser, they were obviously approached to testify.
I think the sad thing is he's already lost. I'm assuming this stunt was a warning to veteran academics to toe the line. The academia won't always protect you anymore. What happened to freedom of minds? Sad, really sad.
Look at the bright side! Open data had a field day out of this bonanza .. probably won't get far but I bet those tight pious folks are thinking, oh shoot what the ?
Well I'm sure I speak for many people when I say the suspense is killing us.
When, if ever, are we going to know for sure what happened? When is the truth going to come out, so we don't need to rely on rumour?
I think that not only in the legal system, but also in science we should believe that people are innocent until their guilt is proven beyond reasonable doubt.
The only new information the recent NYT article seems to add is that there is a theoretical possibility that the missing data of the 2002 Cognition paper might be the result of a computer mistake. But according to my information it was Hauser himself who retracted the paper and took full responsibility. If this problem were due to a computer mistake, would that not have been the best point to make that clear? And would we not expect the researcher himself knowing best whether it was a computer mistake or worse?
True, this is speculative; but assuming on the other hand that the Harvard University would fabricate an investigation involving many people and finding one of their most famous professors guilty of eight cases of misconduct, thus damaging their public image, but first trying to hide this report until a newspaper writes about it many months later, thus potentially damaging their image even more (if their conclusion were inaccurate), seems to me much more speculative.
But I agree with the Neuroskeptic that it is impossible to draw any certain conclusions without the data being available; and we probably first have to wait that the governmental investigations are finished.
The fact is that for what ever reason we don't know the true and all the opinions are driven by the simpathy that different people could feel toward Hauser. The only thing that I can confidently say is that as a researcher in social cognition, I have replicated most of hauser and cols. published work on moral judgment by my self. So at least in that domain, I can be sure his results are right.
Hauser is in a precarious situation right now. He can't flail his arms in the air declaring computer error! People make mistakes what's the big deal?! I'm guessing he retracted the paper thinking it'll blow over, I mean it usually does doesn't it? Papers get retracted, people make mistakes.
I don't think he suspected they were on his case.
What Harvard did was wrong. The academia shouldn't be sacrificing their own for whatever reason. Are the tides really changing? I'm assuming this incident scared the bejeez out of some academics because everyone has made mistakes. So I do hope he wins this case. But I doubt it.
Do we really need to see the data? Does it matter if he made a few mistakes? I think the scary thing is whatever happens in Harvard has a ripple effect on other academic institutions around the world. Maybe there's more to this story: internal wrangles or something else brewing?
Maybe after Hauser gets through it all he'll write a book about what actually happened. But right now, dillydallying against Harvard may not be the safest option nor the most responsible option given the whole world is watching.
Hey veri:
You know what is really scary? The fact that you are sanctioning fraud. And you show signs of a thought disorder.
Oh is that so? Fraud comes with an offshore account, or maybe just Swiss. Integrity don't need evidence, it just is.
If you don't have the courage to question your comfort zones, that isn't my problem. But I'm sorry I scared you.
Despite all the seeming evidence pressured and directed at Hauser, I believe he's innocent. This is a game I know too well.
I hope I'm wrong. A thought disorder would be nice. I want to think like you. TRUST the ivory, polished systems!
But at the moment my conscience won't allow it. Sorry.
Also can I tell you what's even more scary about me? I don't have a life. I don't think you do either: given your punctuation shows: you don't write many love letters do you? So let me know if you want to sanction me where it matters.. becoz you need to teach me how to think like you, save me Tarzan I need your help.
* by sanction I mean stop, and not the context typicals use.
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