Ideas on how to improve scientific research

Bridging the gap from scientific discovery to new products.

Brian Armstrong
19 min readFeb 25, 2019

Update: the idea proposed in this blog post has now launched at https://www.researchhub.com/. Please go check it out and join to show your support.

Academic research could be much more efficient. It struggles with:

  • prioritization of what to work on
  • reproducibility of results
  • alignment to market incentives
  • access to funding
  • cost and delays from academic journals

In this post, I’ll explore some ideas on how to improve scientific research, including how to make it work more like open source software.

Several million academic papers are published each year, but only a small handful of them actually lead to new products and services where people can really benefit from them.

Scientists often live in their own world, producing insights that are only read by other scientists. At the same time, business people often live in their own world, creating products that lack any real technological innovation. There isn’t much information flow between the groups¹.

Most new products that get created rely on marketing and branding to differentiate. This is common in the cosmetics, food, and fitness/diet industries, for instance, where private label manufacturers make many of the same products under different labels.

Here are a bunch of drinks sold at Whole Foods. They are marketed as improving energy, passion, and healing but really they are all repackaging the same few FDA approved ingredients (caffeine, theanine, sugar, etc). Where is the drink with some kind of proprietary molecule or intellectual property in it?

The exceptions to this proves the rule. Companies that bridge the divide (or successfully marry technology with business) tend to be the most valuable: Tesla, Genentech, Google, Apple, SpaceX, etc. Often these seem to require a technical founder (or founding team), with sufficient understanding of both science and business².

People who understand both are rare. They are the intersection of two already rare groups. Many scientists have an allergic reaction to business, and many business people are unable to distinguish real science from pseudoscience. Perhaps, if we didn’t have to rely on these rare bilingual people, we’d see more innovative products in the world. Maybe we can create some translation tools to help improve the flow of ideas from academic research to business.

Some challenges with research today

Academia exists in a weird alternate reality where money and traditional market incentives don’t seem to matter. Tenure, citations, and the opinion of your peers is what leads to grants, so instead this has become the currency of academia³.

Here are some problems that I see with research today:

  1. Reproducibility
    In some fields, more than 50% of experiments are not able to be reproduced. Many papers do not include the underlying datasets. Researchers sometimes have an incentive to hide key details in their paper to stay one step ahead of competing labs. In addition, negative results⁵ are less likely to be published.
  2. Prioritization
    We often don’t fund or pursue work that would do the most good⁶. While it can be difficult to tell what a line of inquiry will eventually lead to (many great discoveries happened while looking at something unrelated), it would be nice if there was a better feedback mechanism from private industry about the most important challenges they are facing. This ties into “market incenives” below. One scientist I spoke with while writing this post shared an anecdote that “In my field of [redacted], I see >70% of publications being on technology that will never come close to commercialization. [a recent big push of $100M in funding] yielded, in my opinion, nothing.”
  3. Market Incentives
    Research seems too disconnected from the real world at times, perhaps because scientists don’t often capture the financial upside of their work. Instead, they use alternate currencies (like citations). Perhaps licensing⁷ could be simplified to align research more with market incentives and help scientists capture more upside form their inventions.
  4. Funding
    It can take a huge amount of time for researchers to apply for grants and receive funding⁸. They often have to alter their ideas⁹ to fit them into grant proposals (i.e. could I argue that this is somehow relevant to defense spending?¹⁰) and a lot of money goes to running the university itself (about 50% at Stanford, for instance). In addition, a lot of NIH/NSF funding is arguably too conservative. The people writing the grants are trying to minimize downside, not maximize upside, which means they are likely to overlook (contrarian) breakthrough ideas.
  5. Speed
    Making a new discovery is difficult enough, but once one is made, it can still be many years before it sees the light of day. The process of applying to journals and peer review adds a lot of delay. In addition, people are hesitant to publish in-progress or half finished work (although “pre-print” servers have helped with this), so there is a tendency to wait until something is “done” to share it.
  6. Comprehensibility
    Academic papers use a lot of jargon that is only decipherable by other people in the field. Some of this is unavoidable (research is about complex topics), but it also makes it less likely that people outside the field will understand the potential of a new discovery.
  7. Volume
    There are a large number of papers published, some without much original content. This can make it difficult to wade through all the material out there to see what might be relevant to you.
  8. Cost/Accessibility
    A lot of research is funded by taxpayer dollars and should arguably be free to the public, but instead it is locked up behind paywalls at journals. There are workarounds for this (Sci-Hub, which is illegal, or just emailing the author directly to ask for a copy), but the journals add a lot of friction to research without adding much value.
  9. Ivory Tower
    Research can take place anywhere from CERN’s Large Hadron Collider to a garage, and be done by anyone from tenured professors to hobbyists (or even anonymous people). It can also take place in private companies, and in any language (right now there is a barrier between machine learning papers published in Chinese and English). It would be nice to see a wider definition of research come together all in one community.
  10. Journals
    The academic journals seem to slow things down in terms of time and money, in exchange for providing some curation and credentialing. The aggregate revenue of the academic journals is about $20B annually, for little value add.

A proposed solution

It’s easy to point out problems, and much harder to create solutions. I’ll try the latter.

It would be nice if research happened more like open source software and was more aligned with market incentives. It would also be nice if there was prioritization like Reddit, comments like Google Docs, and pull requests like GitHub.

My proposed solution is an app or website that brings together a community of researchers in a novel way. It attempts to improve the quality and speed at which research gets done, how it gets communicated to entrepreneurs and business people, and how scientists could get funding and upside.

This idea is not very new, I just don’t think it’s been executed yet.

You’ll see elements of Reddit, Github, Wikipedia, StackExchange, RapGenius, and Kickstarter present. Part of this is really just taking the best of what is already working online.

The other part of this is providing a viable alternative to scientific journals. To do this we need to replicate the positive aspects of journals (curation of content and status/reputation for those getting published) and eliminate the negative aspects (cost and delays).

Below are each of the core components of my proposed solution:

Ranking/Prioritization

The sheer volume of papers published every day is overwhelming. If we can get trusted people to rate papers, we can turn this into rankings or leaderboards. Imagine being able to see the “top papers in biology this year/month/week” based on crowd sourced votes from knowledgeable people. If you only have a few hours to read papers in a month (like me), this would help a lot.

Perhaps out of some sense of politeness, people in academia seem to be reluctant to give a thumbs up/down to their colleagues work in a public forum. Journals often don’t publish the identity of the people doing the peer review. This strikes me as a key part of the problem.

The ratings could be similar to Google’s Page Rank algorithm, meaning they are weighted by how knowledgeable or trusted the rater is.

I could imagine research being rated across a handful of metrics:

  1. Originality
    Is there a genuine breakthrough here that added a leaf to the tree of knowledge?
  2. Reproducibility
    Does the paper contain sufficient detail for others to reproduce the work, and how many other people/labs have actually been able to do so?
  3. Commercial viability
    Could this research plausibly lead to something that would benefit people?

These ratings could be aggregated into an overall score for each paper, possibly eventually incorporating hundreds of variables (like Page Rank). The rankings which exist today, such as the H-Index for authors, which looks at how their work is cited, are quite simple by comparison.

It would be interesting to try aggregating papers into meta studies as well, to generate a “confidence” score on a particular conclusion, and see how it has changed over time.

There should be some way to clearly mark research as “in progress” as well to prevent people getting negative ratings before it is really “finished”. In theory, all research is “in progress”, so the idea of a static PDF seems woefully outdated.

Reputation

The reputation of the people doing the rating (and discussion) in the community is the other key component here. For this site to be trusted, the people with real knowledge of a field need to have their voice rise to the top, and not be drowned out or bullied by the internet trolls. Similar to other online forums (Reddit, Hacker News, StackExchange) users should develop a reputation over time based on their contributions. This can be derived from their comments, edits, original research, or it could be their reputation outside of the app (LinkedIn, more traditional academic credentials, etc) which could appear on a profile page. In other words, traditional academic credentials shouldn’t be the only way to develop a reputation in research.

It’s an interesting question about whether the site should allow anonymous users. My instinct is to say yes, and allow users to be anonymous if they want to. The reason is simply that there are some fields where it is difficult to offer a dissenting opinion without repercussions. As Sam Altman points out, “nearly all ideas that turn out to be great breakthroughs start out sounding like terrible ideas”. Galileo was famously imprisoned for proposing the idea that the earth moved around the sun. Satoshi proposed the idea of Bitcoin under a pseudonym. I’ve heard stories from a handful of scientists who faced retaliation when their research was contradictory or competitive with another well respected person in the field.

Users who want to remain anonymous may not be able to bring their external reputation with them to the site (this is downside), but hopefully they can speak freely and “crazy” ideas can be evaluated on their own merit.

The most important reason to have reputation on the site is just to have sane discussion take place so that legitimate scientists feel they can interact with other rational people.

Funding

How do we align incentives amongst everyone in this community? We want to encourage participation (submitting research, commenting/editing, etc) and also fund research that the community deems worthy.

One idea is to give away a coin that incentivises the behavior the community needs to keep growing. People could potentially also apply for grants and get paid in this new coin.

A better tech transfer office

Today, there is a ton of promising research that never gets commercialized. When it does happen, a company or entrepreneur typically reaches out to the tech transfer office of the university to try and license the technology. Or in some cases, the researchers themselves try to spin out companies, with varying degrees of success.

I wonder if the process of licensing technology from researchers could be made much simpler. Imagine having a “License” button at the bottom of every paper page that hand holds you through the process. Or imagine having standard licensing terms, similar to the YCombinator SAFE, the Creative Commons license, or the MIT License in open source. Ideally, people could license your technology in 5 minutes, under some standar terms, without ever having the pick up the phone.

Every piece of research published could be available under one of the following licenses (for instance):

  1. Free, public domain
    This could actually be a requirement depending on the source of funding.
  2. “Standard” license terms
    For instance, receive 1% of revenue for any product derived from it for 25 years. Non-exclusive license.
  3. Custom
    Contact the tech transfer office (or equivalent) to discuss a custom deal.

Plain english summaries

I find most academic papers to be fairly challenging to read, so it would be great to see a “plain English” explanation of what each paper attempted to do, and what it found. These summaries could be crowdsourced like Wikipedia or written by paying grad students, for instance.

Most papers contain an “abstract” and “conclusion” section that takes a good step in this direction, but I don’t think it goes far enough.

For example, take this article which I selected at random (it happens to be at the top of page on archiv.org today as I’m writing this):

Here is the abstract:

This is a good example of the flowery language that sometimes can make research unapproachable. An even more concise summary would probably suffice, such as “stress in the womb causes neurodegenerative disease later in life”.

I suspect flowery language has a more pernicious purpose in many cases though, which is to hide the fact that nothing interesting was discovered in the paper, and to help the paper seem more important than it is. In the example above, I also tried reading the conclusion of this paper also, but after doing so I can not tell you (1) what did they try doing? (2) did it work? (3) what are the limitations? and (4) what are the suggested next steps? By the way, this is not a criticism of this specific paper. The problem seems endemic to science.

So summarizing research for a wider audience could be very clarify, even if it just helps separate the signal from the noise. Various guidelines for this could be put in place, such as targeting a high school or bachelors level of reading, or limiting summaries to the N most common words in the English language. Wikipedia is a great example to follow here. They have some content on how to make technical articles more understandable and how to write clear articles in general. Their guidelines suggest a “straightforward, just the facts” style that is free from opinion and “available to the widest possible general audience”

Finally, to give the benefit of doubt, there may be other reasons scientists are hesitant to explain their papers in plain english. People may inappropriately act on what they are saying as medical advice, they may be misquoted or attacked by digital mobs, or they may be accused of “hyping” their work instead of speaking in the precise language of science. Speaking in code helps ensure that only the people they want to speak with can understand what they’re saying. This is a reasonable survival instinct, but it also means that most research is happening in small closed groups. Wikipedia I think demonstrates that it is possible to explain complex topics to a wide audience while still getting into technical detail when necessary.

Discussion, editing, and collaboration

It would be great to see modern tools in this area applied to research.

Sites like Reddit, Hacker News, and StackExchange have demonstrated how powerful nested and voted/sorted comments are. It’s surprising to me that this hasn’t become ubiquitous on the internet. They are not terribly difficult to implement, yet the vast majority of sites on the internet still have comment section that are chronological and filled with low quality content. This includes every site I’ve seen where academic research can be discussed.

It would also be interesting to try inline comments like on Genius.com or Google Docs to discuss specific lines in papers.

Discussion is just scratching the surface though. Why not allow people to submit pull requests to papers like on Github, or make suggested edits like in Google Docs? Why not let people add collaborators (even if they’ve never met in real life). Why not let people fork research and take it in a new direction?

One of the biggest issues with research today (at least in my view) is that teams seem to work in isolation until something is “done” or ready for publication. Of course, research (just like software) is rarely “done”; it is continually being refined. I think open source software has a much better model and culture here, where you make your very first commit public from day one and it is never “done”. It’s totally ok in open source to show work that is “in progress”. In fact, that is half the point because you never know who might show up to help you along the way.

Open to everyone

I have a hunch that we’d get more innovation if research was opened up beyond closed academic circles. There may be someone with an important new idea, who is just working in their garage, or a laboratory on the other side of the world.

Many great innovations happen as a by product of trying to build something. Bringing applied scientists, engineers, and researchers closer together in one community could help a lot.

It could be great to see tenured professors and tinkerers commenting side by side. We could expand the number of people collaborating on a particular problem by 10x.

Expanding beyond the idea of “papers”

A paper implies a finished publication with a fixed set of contributors.

It would be great if people could post in progress research as well. Maybe just a hypothesis (something you’d like to see tested in the future), or a dataset (that you weren’t able to draw any conclusions from, but maybe someone else could). This could also take the form of a Jupyter notebook.

Maybe the more fundamental unit is really an experiment. What did you try? What was the result? What does this imply? How sure are we that it is true/correct? What are some examples where this could be useful?

What are people using today since this doesn’t exist?

Each of the items below is solving a piece of the problem.

  1. Networking/Conferences/Friends
    This is the primary method today, although it relies too much on happenstance. How many companies were never started because two people failed to meet, each one with half of a good idea?
  2. Wikipedia
    Some of the biggest/most popular scientific breakthroughs get plain english explanations written up here in a way that non-academics can understand, but there isn’t enough coverage.
  3. Github
    We’re starting to see more datasets published here, which is nice.
  4. Arxiv.org, PubMed, PubChem, Biorxiv, etc
    The pre-print servers have been a step in the right direction (eliminating some paywalls), and at least some papers are available to purchase online now.
  5. Arxiv-sanity
    Great step in the right direction to make the overwhelming number of papers which are published a bit more accessible, but could go even further. For instance, it only covers machine learning papers.
  6. Reddit/HackerNews/StackExchange
    Some topics have garnered their own sub-reddits, like /r/machine-learning. HackerNews is where I first read about the Bitcoin whitepaper (I didn’t regularly read CS papers, but I happened to read the Bitcoin whitepaper after seeing it get up-voted there). These sites give you the ranking and reputation piece.
  7. YouTube
    Channels that explain topics like cryptocurrency and machine learning make certain research topics more accessible.
  8. Sci-Hub
    People have taken to pirating papers to make them more accessible online, even though it breaks the law.
  9. Big tech companies
    The GAFA companies and a few others have done so well in part because they have great scientists working with good product/business people internally. Much of this research is proprietary.
  10. Experiment.com/ScienceExchange.com
    Crowdsourcing research.
  11. Google Scholar, ResearchGate
    Great steps in the right direction.
  12. Meta.org, OccamszRazor
    Uses natural language processing to try and make discovery of related papers easier.
  13. Center For Open Science
    And the Open Science Framework.

Others have noticed that there is an opportunity here for a killer app.

Conclusion

Innovation is sometimes just peanut butter and chocolate coming together to create something greater than the sum of the parts. You have half an idea, and someone somewhere in the world has the other half of an idea. If you can both find each other, innovation happens faster.

For this to work, at least one of you need to publish your half baked idea (I call this putting out a bat signal) so the other person can find you. Making academic research happen more like software (Github, etc) would be a great step in this direction.

In the killer app I’m thinking of, people would start connecting long before a paper gets published. There could be research that is done in the open from the beginning, or private research areas where people begin to collaborate.

I’m writing this to put out my own bat signal. Maybe someone in the world has another piece of the solution. I’ve also thought about investing in a good team that might want to tackle this challenge.

If you’re interested in hearing more about this idea, have a piece of the solution you think I should know about, or might want to work on this yourself please fill out this form here.

Update: the idea proposed in this blog post has now launched at https://www.researchhub.com/. Please go check it out and join to show your support.

Thank you to the following people (and others) who read drafts of this post, including: Alice Zhang, Balaji Srinivasan, Carly Emmer, D. Scott Phoenix, Elad Gil, Fred Ehrsam, Genevieve Khoo, Janelle Tam, Kathryn Loving, Ling Wong, Rob Rhinehart, Shivon Zilis, Tim Holme, and Tristan Tager.

Footnotes:

The following are comments left by scientists who read drafts of this post.

  1. On the lack of information flow between scientists and business people:
    “Before 1945 there used to be greater information flow between these groups. The modern NSF/NIH grants system arose out of Vannevar Bush’s memos, which federalized scientific research and set up a division between scientists and businessmen. But aviation, automobiles, and railroads were largely developed by private industry without NSF funding. Indeed railroads and steam engines led to empirical thermodynamics which led in turn to statistical mechanics. Same with aviation and aerospace engineering — it was initially empirical and phenomenological, driven by industry, and only then turned into a science.
  2. On the source of breakthroughs:
    “it’s worth asking what % of societal utility comes from entrepreneurs vs universities and research. On the one hand, you have Wright Bros, Bell, Edison, Ford, PARC, Woz, Intel, etc. One the other hand, we’ve experienced incredible ROI for society by funding projects that took a detour and discovered something valuable that they had not set out to discover (eg, CRISPR, penicillin).”
  3. On publishing leading to additional grants:
    “IMO, this is the root of the problem. Grants from the NIH are the lifeline of most academic labs, and they heavily weight prestigious publications i.e. Nature, Science, Cell. Many of the top journals are for-profit, so they are optimizing for getting the hot science stories first for readership (a la CRISPR), rather than reproducibility or commercialization. In addition the NIH is in reality, quite risk averse, and skews towards funding already established investigators that are proposing incremental de-risked science. We often put famous investigators on our grant because we knew it would increase our chances of getting grants. In my old lab (one of the most highly funded in California), our PI (boss) would actually get grants for work he had already done and in reality use the grant for other new work, which speaks to how risk averse the grant system is.”
  4. On reproducibility:
    “To me, this is the top of the list. It should be the crisis of the decade. Aside from poor science being a huge waste of resources that went into the primary work, there are the resources that go into follow-ups, plus a loss of credibility of science that reduces the willingness of public to fund and believe science.”
  5. On negative results:
    “The core problem is that of huge academic incentives towards surprising results, and not much else. This causes many researchers, even subconsciously, to not even attempt to publish negative results or to check existing results, and instead to exaggerate modest results to become more surprising. The exaggerations, of course, make the result non-reproducible. Journals likewise may not publish negative or confirmatory studies, since those don’t attract readers.”
  6. On prioritization and commercial viability:
    “what will ‘do the most good’ is difficult to determine b/c it’s hard to tell where the next breakthrough will come from; for example, Alimta, a new anti-cancer drug was discovered out of research on the pigments that give monarch butterfly wings their brilliant orange hue. It’s possible as well that we won’t see the fruits of research we’ve funded for years. Maybe early work that won’t be commercialized is what lays the ground for future work that will.”
    “I don’t necessarily agree with [your point on prioritization]. The mandate of the NIH as it was originally conceived is to fund important scientific work that may not have apparent immediate commercial value (which was already getting funded), [and] may lead to even larger innovations that are game-changing in ways we can’t anticipate. As an example, CRISPR was discovered from the study of an obscure sea bacteria… one could argue at the time that this isn’t obviously work that would do the most good. Point is, its challenging to define a priori what ‘doing the most good’ looks like now versus in 5 years, 10 years, 100 years”
  7. On licensing IP from universities:
    “When you work at a university, there’s an understanding that all IP you generate there is owned by the university. When the university licenses the IP to an external party, its the university not the individual investigator that is receiving most of the royalties and potential upside. Universities rely increasingly on royalties from blockbuster drugs discovered to fund their programs. In the last few years, I’ve seen universities become increasingly greedy and aggressive in striking licensing deals, which has slowed down the the rate of not only commercialization but also biotech BD in general.”
  8. On funding projects vs people:
    “NIH funds projects versus people over a 5 year grant. Imagine if a startup received funding but could not pivot, and had to hit pre-proposed milestones to get more funding. It would mean a lack of innovation because you could not change direction. The HHMI funds people over projects (e.g. “I am going to fund you to work on this general area” versus “the only thing you can ever work on is this very specific thing in that area”) and this seems to be a good model for funding agencies in general (excluding niche research that should get specifically funded and done)”
  9. On the game of trying to capture grant money:
    “Some funding agencies are so conservative that the research has to be essentially already done to get an award. Most funding agencies don’t want to stray too far from the consensus, so it can be very hard to get funding for contrarian ideas… Another issue is that it can be very hard for early career profs to get a grant because they don’t have a track record (e.g. average age of first-time awardee of NIH grant is over 40 years old.”
    “A great example [of people positioning their research as something else to get funding is] biodefense -> microbial genomics grants -> CRISPR (which arose from the analysis of archaeal genome sequences). This article states: ‘This has resulted in large amounts of funding dedicated to so-called biodefense research, totaling close to $50 billion between 2001 and 2009 [4]. Genomics has benefited greatly from this influx of research dollars and as a result, representatives of most major animal, plant, and human pathogens have been sequenced’”

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Brian Armstrong

Co-Founder and CEO at @Coinbase. Increasing economic freedom in the world. Join us: https://www.coinbase.com/careers