Post
by ArkieDukie » July 24th, 2011, 7:30 pm
I had a lot of time to think this weekend while driving to/from the family farm, and I came up with a plan. If what Pushy PI told me last week is really true, my boss didn't pass along all supporting information that he needs in order to make an informed decision about the piece of data I think is wrong. To recap, my boss passed along only one piece of data and left out everything else. Pushy PI's plan is to include my findings with a note saying my assignment "is equally likely to be true." (Yeah, if you live in fantasy land.) This will be place after the clearly incorrect (IMO) assignment. Pushy PI says that he really wants everything in this paper to be correct since it has his name on it. I think it's time to test him, and this will be a pretty iron-clad test. I'm going to forward the note I sent my boss back in early June that details why my assignment is more likely to be correct than theirs. I'm going to add a note to Pushy PI, politely saying that I think he needs all information in order to make an informed decision. I might also say that, if he chooses to keep the clearly incorrect assignment in the manuscript, he is knowingly committing data falsification. Of course, I will come up with a more diplomatic way of saying this.
Pushy PI opened himself up for this when he asked me to send him a note in which I list all of my issues with the manuscript. This particular issue is MAJOR. If he's really interested in the data being correct, as he says, he'll listen to me. If not, I have further grounds for reporting them to Academic Integrity. If worded correctly and diplomatically, this note will clearly tell them that ignoring my information makes him guilty of data falsification. If it stays in the manuscript, he's hosed: I'll have hard evidence that he knowingly included incorrect data in order to make his results look better.
It still amazes me that my boss only gave him part of the story and is letting them include the incorrect assignment along with the correct one, calling them equally likely. The long drive also gave me time to formulate a theory as to the reason for this: my boss knows he's wrong and doesn't want to admit it. He will rarely, if ever, admit when he's wrong. It's an ego thing, especially since he overruled me on this particular point in the first place. If you remember, after I emphatically stated that this particular assignment was incorrect, my boss sided with Pushy PI and The Minion and let them include it. I proved fairly conclusively that I was right and they were wrong, and they don't want to admit it. It will be interesting to see what Pushy PI thinks when he gets the rest of the story.
I also made another fairly major decision this weekend. Once I have another job in hand, before I leave, I'm going to have a meeting with Pushy PI about The Minion. If he proves to me that he really is concerned about the integrity of his work, I think I need to fill him in on the fact that The Minion does not share his concerns. Either she's blatantly committing data falsification (i.e. she knows what she's doing and doesn't care), or she's too stupid to know that this is what she's doing. Since she has ignored me on multiple occasions when I call her on it, I seriously think it's the former. IMO neither scenario is particularly excusible for someone in her position, and it makes Pushy PI look bad.
Most people say that is it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
-- Albert Einstein