Trial by Error, Continued: Is PACE a Case of Research Misconduct?
…research misconduct since I started my PACE investigation. In my long Virology Blog series in October 2015, I decided to document the trial’s extensive list of flaws, or as many…
…research misconduct since I started my PACE investigation. In my long Virology Blog series in October 2015, I decided to document the trial’s extensive list of flaws, or as many…
…or CFS) would be a one-off investigation, and then I’d move on to other projects. But after my 15,000-word series was posted on Virology Blog in October of 2015, the…
…years ago and failed to respond to my requests for evidence or documentation, I sent a series of strongly worded e-mails to the board of the CFS/ME Research Collaborative. Professor…
…Columbia University. Since then, the Trial By Error series has focused international attention on the study€™s methodological and ethical lapses and on the similar failings of related research. I have…
…By Error” series on Virology Blog in October, 2015, with a 15,000-word investigation of the disastrous PACE trial, which tested cognitive behavior therapy and graded exercise therapy as treatments for…
…the kinetics of this presumed interaction revealed that pUL36 does indeed bind kinesin through a series of tryptophan-aspartate (WD) motifs. Two of these motifs – WD3 and WD4 – appear…