Jeremy Berg is taking on one of the most influential jobs in science just as the scientific endeavour is facing a challenge of historic proportions. Â Â
As the new editor-in-chief of Science, a highly selective journal that still has the controversial power to make scientific careers, the biochemist and former University of Pittsburgh senior manager is worried about an apparent rejection of science by some parts of the public â and thinks that academics should look closely at how their own behaviour may have contributed. Â
âOne of the things that drew me to this positionâŠis thereâs a crisis in public trust in science,â he tells Times Higher Education after starting in the Science post on 1 July. âI donât pretend to have answers to that question but it is something that I care deeply about.â
Berg, who started his career in chemistry but then moved on to span a host of other disciplines including biochemistry and personalised medicine, acknowledges that societyâs confidence in science does âwax and waneâ over time but thinks that, this time, things are different.
Âé¶č
In the US, âscientists have been labelled as another special interest groupâ, he says.
Part of this is down to the polarisation of American politics and the rise of an anti-intellectual spirit, Berg thinks. His fears echo , an American health writer, who earlier this year told graduating students at the California Institute of Technology that âwe are experiencing a significant decline in trust in scientific authoritiesâ.
Âé¶č
In his address, Gawande cited a study that showed a among American conservatives. In 1974, conservatives had the most trust in science, but by 2010, they had the least, and substantially less than liberals in particular.
Donald Trump, who has erroneously , blamed China for to undermine US manufacturing and claimed that environmentally friendly light bulbs , can be seen as one manifestation of this long-term collapse in conservative trust in science in the US.
But researchers are not entirely blameless for this rising hostility, thinks Berg. âScientists are guilty of behaving in some ways of making this stick more than it needs to,â he says.
Too often they have gone beyond explaining the scientific situation and ventured into policy prescriptions, notably in the case of climate change, he thinks. âThe policy issues should be informed by science, but they are separate questions,â he says. âScientists to some degree, intentionally or otherwise, have been mashing the two together,â he adds, and urges scientists to be more âtransparentâ about âwhere the firmness of your conclusions endâ.
Another area where scientists have overstepped the reach of their evidence is in drug development, where there âhas been a tendency maybe to overhype early results", Berg suggests.
âScientistsâŠsay 'we have this really important discovery and it will lead to new drugs for treating cancer in the next few years', when the reality is that they have swum the first lap of a sixteen-lap race,â he warns.
Bergâs interest in the communication of science comes in part from his time leading the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the basic research arm of the USâ National Institute of Health (NIH), where he was director from 2003 to 2011.
There he found that the NIHâs policies towards researchers, although well thought through, were âpretty closeâ to being âopaqueâ and in need of better elucidation, he says.
Âé¶č
But some in the scientific community argue that high-profile journals such as Science are partly to blame for the very overhyping of results that Berg decries.
Âé¶č
A made waves after it found that there was a correlation between journal impact factors (JIFs) â which measure average paper citation rates over the past two years and are highest for prestigious journals such as Science, Nature and Cell â and the rate of retractions. Science had the second highest rate of retractions among the journals studied, below only the New England Journal of Medicine.
This could be because these journals are more highly scrutinised, the authors said. But it could also be because of demands from such journals for âclear and definitiveâ results, they suggested, which incentivise researchers to cut corners to come up with a neat scientific story.
Berg acknowledges that there is a âdelicate balanceâ to strike between sharing the exciting fruits of research with the public and being sure not to exaggerate findings.
He argues that Science has âby and largeâ got this balance right, although he admits that âthere have been things that garner lots of publicity that turn out to be overblown or just plain wrong".
Although only six weeks into his job, Berg has already taken aim at JIFs, an oft-criticised way to rank journals and gauge the quality of scientistsâ work. In a Science and , Berg calculated that because papers have such a big spread of citations within any one journal, it makes little sense to use the JIF to predict how many citations any one article will have.
JIFs have been âabused by the scientific community and the scientific administrative communityâ, he tells THE, and have taken on âa life of their ownâ. Some journals specify their impact factors to three decimal places â this level of specious detail should be âlike fingernails on a chalkboardâ to a scientist, he says.
Berg stops short of saying that Science will no longer release its JIF, as âtransparency is good". But actively publicising an impact factor is âa much harder case to makeâ, he says.
Science and others have also been under fire for their high rejection rates: the accused prestigious journals of behaving âlike fashion designers who create limited-edition handbags or suitsâ because âthey know scarcity stokes demand, so they artificially restrict the number of papers they acceptâ.
Science Advances, an online only, open access journal launched in 2014, is a way to ease this problem, Berg argues, as it can accommodate articles too long to fit into Science itself.
It is âcertainly the goalâ for Science Advances to be as prestigious as Science itself, he says. âI donât see it as the consolation prize if you donât get in to Science.â
But even if the clout of Science Advances grows, Berg acknowledges that there may always be a âprestige edgeâ for physical journals â such as Science â where space is inevitably scarce.Â
Âé¶č
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: 'Crisis in public trust in science'
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








