none1noUsing multiple independent methods or tools to inquire into a phenomenon (a practice called triangulation) is considered valuable to achieve robust information about that phenomenon. Critics however have objected that triangulation is valuable only in specific situations, namely when findings from different methods are reliable and consistent. Tools used in cognitive neuroscience often provide partial, inconsistent, and divergent findings on the role of brain processes and mechanisms in cognition. Consequently, it is unclear whether triangulation is of any value in cognitive neuroscience. I consider a messy case, where different neuroscientific tools have provided inconsistent and divergent evidence and compare this with a succ...