Asked by Julie
Why is it important for scientists to replicate each other’s experiments?
to determine if important scientific results are repeatable
to help the research of other scientists
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Both statements are correct.
- To determine if results are repeatable: Replication checks that findings aren’t flukes, mistakes, artifacts of a particular lab, or fraudulent. Repeated confirmation builds confidence that a result is reliable and generalizable.
- To help other scientists’ research: Replication clarifies methods, reveals limitations or boundary conditions, supplies data for meta-analyses, and lets other researchers extend or apply the finding with confidence.
Together, these functions keep science self-correcting, cumulative, and trustworthy.
- To determine if results are repeatable: Replication checks that findings aren’t flukes, mistakes, artifacts of a particular lab, or fraudulent. Repeated confirmation builds confidence that a result is reliable and generalizable.
- To help other scientists’ research: Replication clarifies methods, reveals limitations or boundary conditions, supplies data for meta-analyses, and lets other researchers extend or apply the finding with confidence.
Together, these functions keep science self-correcting, cumulative, and trustworthy.
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