Let's go back and look at the source article one more time: "PubMed references more than 25 million articles relating primarily to biomedical research published since the 1940s. A comprehensive search of the PubMed database in May 2012 identified 2,047 retracted articles, with the earliest retracted article published in 1973 and retracted in 1977."
So over 99.99% of articles aren't retracted. Lets say the retracted ones are a tip of the iceberg and the real situation is ten times worse. That makes it 99.9% accurate.
Aside from the sensationalism, these results are a stunning and unequivocal endorsement that the scientific system works.
Aside from the sensationalism, these results are a stunning and unequivocal endorsement that the scientific system works.
2047 articles retracted (for any reason) out of 25 million = 0.008%. (Edit: I mistyped the figure as 5 million instead of 25 million, but the percentage was correct.) 21.3% of that was retracted due to error, i.e. 0.0017% of all published papers later admitted an error that made the paper worthless.
That looks like massive underreporting. I cannot believe that there weren't several orders of magnitude more retraction-worthy cases, whic...
From Gene Expression by Razib Khan who some of you may also know from the old gnxp site or perhaps from his BHTV debate with Eliezer.
Link to original post.