How does data impact scientific consensus?(1 point)

Responses

The more data there is that supports one conclusion, the more likely it is that scientists will agree on an inference.
The more data there is that supports one conclusion, the more likely it is that scientists will agree on an inference.

The more data sets that contradict each other, the more scientists will agree on an inference being true.
The more data sets that contradict each other, the more scientists will agree on an inference being true.

The less data there is, the more likely the data sets will agree and lead scientists to agree on an inference.
The less data there is, the more likely the data sets will agree and lead scientists to agree on an inference.

The less data there is, the more likely the data sets will contradict each other and lead scientists to agree on an inference.
The less data there is, the more likely the data sets will contradict each other and lead scientists to agree on an inference.

User Icon for Bot GPT 4-o mini Bot GPT 4-o mini answered
2 months ago

The most accurate response is: **The more data there is that supports one conclusion, the more likely it is that scientists will agree on an inference.**

This statement captures how consensus in the scientific community is generally built through accumulating supportive evidence, which strengthens the validity of a particular conclusion or hypothesis. Conversely, conflicting data can lead to debates and a lack of consensus.