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Reproducibility as a Methodological Imperative in Experimental Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 January 2023

Michael J. Hones*
Affiliation:
Villanova University
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In experimental scientific research, such as that conducted in High-Energy Physics (HEP), there are a number of problems which are unique to the experimental endeavor in contrast to theoretical research. The preparation of a sample of data to be analyzed requires a number of complicated and interrelated procedures to insure the purity or quality of the data. Thus, for example, in an experimental study of meson-baryon scattering, the separation of events of one type of scattering from others of similar configuration (see the discussion of different configurations in section II) requires intricate and sophisticated procedures along with the application of a number of criteria and standards of analysis. In the case of theoretical research, there are a number of philosophical discussions which formulate certain criteria or norms that theorists usually invoke in their evaluation of theories as well as in the actual choice of one theory over another.

Type
Part X. Experiment
Copyright
Copyright © Philosophy of Science Association 1990

Footnotes

1

The research for this paper was supported in part by a Villanova Faculty Summer Research Grant for Summer 1989. Also my participation in a seminar in “Naturalistic Epistemology”, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, was instrumental in the initial formulation of this paper. This seminar was conducted by Prof. Larry Laudan at the University of Hawaii during the Summer 1989. Finally, I would like to acknowledge the helpful comments of Prof. Steve Fuller of Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

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