Perspective on Scientific Error

8th workshop

SAVE THE DATE!

11, 12, and 13 February 2026 in Leiden

The Netherlands

Call for presentation and poster submission will open soon!

Description

Join us for this eighth edition to discuss statistical, philosophical, and meta-scientific issues of scientific error. Theoretical arguments have suggested the possibility that the number of false claims in the scientific literature is much higher than desired and reports across fields have subsequently shown that many findings that researchers believed were firmly established failed to replicate. These erroneous claims in the scientific literature raise important issues. From an empirical practitioner’s perspective, errors mislead and slow down research projects. From a philosophical perspective, scientific error raises questions about the right forms of scientific inference, scientific progress, and the reliability of science as a source of knowledge. From the perspective of the general public, scientific error undermines the epistemic authority of science and the degree to which policy-makers trust scientific experts.

Following the success of the previous seven editions, the eighth Perspectives on Scientific Error workshop will bring together an interdisciplinary group of researchers interested in statistical, philosophical, and meta-scientific issues of scientific error. Participants will share their views on how scientific errors can be detected and corrected, how they influence knowledge generation, and the perception of science as a whole.

previous workshops

Organizers

Noah van Dongen, Erasmus University Rotterdam

Tom Heyman, Leiden University

Daniel Lakens, Eindhoven University of Technology

Felipe Romero, University of Groningen

Anna van ’t Veer, Leiden University