Research on communication with completely paralyzed patients prompts misconduct investigation

Research on communication with completely paralyzed patients prompts misconduct investigation

5 years ago
Anonymous $syBn1NGQOq

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/04/research-communication-completely-paralyzed-patients-prompts-misconduct-investigation

A device that measures the oxygen levels in different brain regions. Researchers have claimed this technology can allow locked-in patients to communicate.

A research group’s claimed ability to communicate with completely paralyzed people has come under fire, prompting research misconduct investigations at a German university and at Germany’s main research agency, the German Research Foundation (DFG). Two years ago, researchers in Germany and Switzerland claimed that by analyzing blood flow in different parts of the brain with an electronic skullcap, they could elucidate answers to yes or no questions from completely paralyzed people. The find, published in PLOS Biology in 2017, raised hopes for patients with degenerative diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis that ultimately leave them without any voluntary muscle control—not even the ability to blink or move their eyes—a condition called a “completely locked-in state.” Now, a simmering controversy about the paper has erupted into public view.

Research on communication with completely paralyzed patients prompts misconduct investigation

Apr 9, 2019, 7:25pm UTC
http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/04/research-communication-completely-paralyzed-patients-prompts-misconduct-investigation > A device that measures the oxygen levels in different brain regions. Researchers have claimed this technology can allow locked-in patients to communicate. > A research group’s claimed ability to communicate with completely paralyzed people has come under fire, prompting research misconduct investigations at a German university and at Germany’s main research agency, the German Research Foundation (DFG). Two years ago, researchers in Germany and Switzerland claimed that by analyzing blood flow in different parts of the brain with an electronic skullcap, they could elucidate answers to yes or no questions from completely paralyzed people. The find, published in PLOS Biology in 2017, raised hopes for patients with degenerative diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis that ultimately leave them without any voluntary muscle control—not even the ability to blink or move their eyes—a condition called a “completely locked-in state.” Now, a simmering controversy about the paper has erupted into public view.