Reproducibility crisis and gravitation towards a consensus in ocean acidification research

Date

2023

Authors

Connell, S.D.
Leung, J.Y.S.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Nature Climate Change, 2023; 13(11):1266-1271

Statement of Responsibility

Sean D. Connell and Jonathan Y. S. Leung

Conference Name

Abstract

Reproducibility is a persistent concern in science and recently attracts considerable attention in assessing biological responses to ocean acidification. Here we track the reproducibility of the harmful effects of ocean acidification on calcification of shell-building organisms by conducting a meta-analysis of 373 studies across 24 years. The pioneering studies tended to report large negative effects, but as other researchers assimilated this research into understanding their biological systems, the size of negative effects declined. Such declines represent a scientific process by which discoveries are initially assimilated and their limitations are subsequently explored. We suggest that scientific novelties can polarize a discipline where researchers fail to distinguish between different motivations for testing a phenomenon, that is, its existence (theory proposal) versus its influence within ever-widening contexts (theory development). Where context dependency is high, the lack of reproducibility may not represent a crisis but a part of theory development and eventual gravitation towards a consensus position.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Published online: 25 September 2023

Access Status

Rights

© Crown 2023

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record