Researcher Katy Milkman has organized a Zoom workshop for the National Academies on research integrity, featuring some speakers who have been accused of having little integrity themselves.
I examined the full schedule, and I have to say: the program is a strange mix. Some people have great records on speaking about integrity! Elizabeth Bik, the master of image duplication detection? Yes. Ivan Oransky, who runs the Retraction Watch blog? Yes. Michael Dougherty, whose helped to reform career incentives at his department to align with DORA principles? Yes!
Others... do not.
The poster (pictured) mentions Jay Bhattacharya and Emily Oster, both of whom gained prominence for saying institutions overreacted to the covid pandemic. The poster doesn’t mention the format: It is a 45 minute “fireside chat” with Oster interviewing Bhattacharya.
Probably due to this poster featuring these two “covid contrarians” so prominently, the first post was ratio’d quite severely, with over 100 comments, 10 reposts, and about 20 likes as of this writing.
In response to criticism, Milkman wrote:
To everyone responding with vitriol: please come! Our goal in choosing speakers was to platform both popular and unpopular figures advocating for scientific reforms to spark productive conversations across divides! If this makes you angry, come engage in dialogue — that’s how we improve.
Um. If you’re all about “engaging in dialogue, that’s how we improve,” you may not want to call the comments, “vitriol.”
The ratio suggests Milkman’s stepped in it even worse the second time. 444 comments, 158 reposts, and 24 likes as of this writing.
A co-organizer, Jeremy Freese, wrote (original emphasis):
To me, the viewpoint of the Director of NIH on the main issues of the workshop has obvious and considerable relevance for contemporary science policy. ... To me, it would have been both an abuse of the role and nutty hubris for a co-organizer to try to assert that the Director of NIH would be an improper participant in this event, or that there should be a “Bluesky veto” over speakers.
Two things. Maybe three.
- This is supposed to be a workshop on “social and behavioural sciences.” Bhattachayra leads the NIH, which mainly does medical research, not social and behavioural research. Yes, I get that the NIH has a wide remit and supports some social and behavioural research, but it is not the major function of the agency.
- Why invite someone whose work is agency oversight, which is largely removed from research integrity? Why not invite someone whose whole job is research integrity? The NIH has an entire Office of Research Integrity. It’s listed right there on the label!
- Saying that people posting criticisms are asking for a “Bluesky veto” is a convenient way to dismiss what your colleagues are telling you.* I haven’t read everything that Freese read, but I haven’t seen any posts yet saying, “The event should be cancelled because Bluesky users say so.” What I have seen are people saying, “This event is extraordinarily unlikely to get the productive dialogue that the organizers say they want. It is more likely that this event will platform people who are actively undermining research.” It is weird that organizers who keep touting the “Let’s air out our differences and find a way forward” keep dismissing people and only minimally engaging in dialogue.
* Old joke: “When one person calls you a jackass, that person is obviously an ignorant fool. When ten people call you a jackass, maybe you should think about getting fitted for a saddle.”
Cole Donovan reposted with the comment:
Again, as a former National Academies program director familiar with the rules for these as well as how things should go, the issue isn’t whether the NIH director is an appropriate invitee or not to an event. The issue is whether the event’s design is one where disagreements result in dialogue.
I get that organizers put a lot of effort into creating what they thought would be a good event on a worthwhile topic. It’s hard to admit mistakes. It’s hard to course correct mere days before the event. I understand that they don’t want to undercut their own work just a couple of weeks before the workshop.
But the whole thing positively smells like what we have gotten from the National Academies over and over again: absolute refusal to acknowledge that American science is in crisis. And that crisis is being caused by the federal government. And that people like Jay Bhattacharya are simply not leading American science out of the crisis.
Sometimes it feels like the National Academies would rather risk a hundred doctoral programs be cut today rather than risk one congressional representative saying something bad about them five years from now.
Related posts
Ignoring catastrophe: The state of science in 2025, according to the National Academies of Sciences
External links
Why Do Rightwing Foundations Fund Emily Oster’s Work on COVID and Parenting?


