Do lay people and scientists themselves recognize that scientists are human and therefore prone to human fallibilities such as error, bias, and even dishonesty? In a series of three experimental studies and one correlational study (total N = 3,278) we found that the 'storybook image of the scientist' is pervasive: American lay people and scientists from over 60 countries attributed considerably more objectivity, rationality, open-mindedness, intelligence, integrity, and communality to scientists than other highly-educated people. Moreover, scientists perceived even larger differences than lay people did. Some groups of scientists also differentiated between different categories of scientists: established scientists attributed higher levels ...
Do scientists see conflict between science and faith? Which cultural factors shape the attitudes of ...
From our first course in science, we begin to learn about the scientific method as if it were some...
A perennial problem for some scientists is their feeling of comparative failure as scientists. This ...
Do lay people and scientists themselves recognize that scientists are human and therefore prone to h...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
Recent years have not only seen growing public distrust in science, but also in the people conductin...
THE HUMAN FALLIBILITY OF SCIENTISTS Dealing with error and bias in academic research Recent studies ...
Prior research demonstrates that students and some teachers often depict scientists as socially inep...
Laypeople’s trust in science might be obstructed by their stereotypical views of researchers as high...
It has been consistently observed that people are generally overconfident in their judgments or deci...
It has been consistently observed that people are generally overconfident in their judgments or deci...
"Scientists deserve public recognition. The ways that they are depicted, however, are severely limit...
There currently exists a dearth of research on the transmission and assimilation of myths. To overco...
Science is expected to be objective: however, since practiced and produced by humans, it has to refl...
Scientific literacy is explored in this paper which describes two studies that seek to understand a ...
Do scientists see conflict between science and faith? Which cultural factors shape the attitudes of ...
From our first course in science, we begin to learn about the scientific method as if it were some...
A perennial problem for some scientists is their feeling of comparative failure as scientists. This ...
Do lay people and scientists themselves recognize that scientists are human and therefore prone to h...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
Recent years have not only seen growing public distrust in science, but also in the people conductin...
THE HUMAN FALLIBILITY OF SCIENTISTS Dealing with error and bias in academic research Recent studies ...
Prior research demonstrates that students and some teachers often depict scientists as socially inep...
Laypeople’s trust in science might be obstructed by their stereotypical views of researchers as high...
It has been consistently observed that people are generally overconfident in their judgments or deci...
It has been consistently observed that people are generally overconfident in their judgments or deci...
"Scientists deserve public recognition. The ways that they are depicted, however, are severely limit...
There currently exists a dearth of research on the transmission and assimilation of myths. To overco...
Science is expected to be objective: however, since practiced and produced by humans, it has to refl...
Scientific literacy is explored in this paper which describes two studies that seek to understand a ...
Do scientists see conflict between science and faith? Which cultural factors shape the attitudes of ...
From our first course in science, we begin to learn about the scientific method as if it were some...
A perennial problem for some scientists is their feeling of comparative failure as scientists. This ...