
Then it merely could use arsenic in its DNA, if forced to, although under normal conditions it didn't.
But now, it's looking like it's just a regular (albeit tough) bug - and a lot of hot air.
*
The "arsenic-based alien bacteria" story attracted more media attention than any other scientific paper of the last year. At first, I was very pleased by this: to a scientist, the discovery of an organism that can use arsenic instead of phosphorous in its DNA would have been massive news, with big implications for every branch of biology. How great that the media picked up on the importance of this story, even though it's about a specialized point of biochemistry, I thought.
Unfortunately, as you've probably heard, serious questions have been asked about the Science paper announcing the findings. For details, see microbiologist Rosie Redfield's devastating post on the topic: Arsenic-associated bacteria (NASA's claims), and this one from Alex Bradley: Arsenate-based DNA: a big idea with big holes. In a nutshell, the critics make a very strong case that the evidence supposedly showing arsenic-containing DNA is flawed, and fairly obviously so.
As I've said before, this kind of thing is why science blogging is so important. Thanks to bloggers such as those I've linked to, and many others, this paper - which has enormous implications, if true - has been subject to detailed scrutiny within days of publication.
Without blogs, these questions would certainly have been asked sooner or later - but with the emphasis on "later". The traditional way to criticize a paper is to write a Letter to the Editor of the journal that published it but this usually takes, at best, weeks, and usually months to appear.
Some journals now feature "e-letters" which can appear within hours, or public comment threads attached to each paper, and this is certainly a big step forward. Blogs still have the edge, though, because it's often hard to incorporate pictures, html, etc. into these comments, and these discussion threads often become very hard to read as the important comments get mixed up with less useful, or simply out of date, ones.
A blog post, clearly setting out the arguments, and updated as new information comes to light, is, to my mind, the best form of scientific peer review we currently have.
6 comments:
The media's hysteria reminded me of 1996's Martian biology story, where polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were discovered in meteorite ALH 84001:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Hills_84001
I remember thinking at the time, "So Martians use moth balls, is that the conclusion?"
Of course, blogs were a figment of our imagination back then. We were still marveling at the Cambridge Coffee Pot and the UC Irvine bookstore through our Mosaic browsers. Seems it's only the technology that evolves. Human nature remains constant.
Seems it's only the technology that evolves. Human nature remains constant.
What an original idea!
Well, actually human nature does evolve, but not at the same rate.
And, yes, technology is a problem somehow, not a solution, the opposite of what Singularitarians and cornucopians believe.
Not that technology is bad per se it is just the stupid monkeys which are unable to cope.
Read again Ross Ashby (if you ever did...)
Flights of fancy always tend to color scientific findings. There is this totally bizarre concept of the 'objective scientist' who devoid of personal preconceptions reveals the TRUTH. No such entity exists and as long as homo sapiens is at the mercy of ancient brain structures controlling our thought processes, never will.
Science blogges VS(?) Science? Should be: Science bloggers doing Science.
What you describe is nothing more than the scientific process (fully functioning in this case) but through a new, faster, darwinian media.
I suppose the sensationalist title is forgiveable: poetic licence etc. Keep up the good posts!
Anonymous: It's science bloggers vs. Science, the journal ;) But there is also a sense in which it's bloggers vs. Science, the institution, for the good of science, knowledge. To the extent that Science is stuck in the 20th century model of publishing and debate.
"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santy Clause and s/he is a science blogger. "If only.
Our understanding is that the instant-critiques of the arsenic bug were most effective at creating media headlines and questions about the death/doom/Satanic overthrow of scientific or civil society or something.
In fact, their criticisms were pretty much criticizing the science for what it never claimed it was and methodology that is normal but not appropriate for these specific bugs.
There is a good SciAm interview with the PI -- she's no fool. The hyper=bloggers may be.
It did generate a lot of heat though! zzzzzzzzzzzzzz
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