The nature of scientific research sometimes involves a trial-and-error procedure. Popular reviews of successful results from this approach often sanitize the story by omitting unsuccessful trials, thus painting the rosy impression that research simply follows a direct route from hypothesis to experiment to scientific discovery. The discovery of insulin is a classical case study in this genre that begs for an explanation to our students because it is so often ignored or misrepresented even in biology and physiology textbooks.
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1 January 2012
The Discovery of Insulin: A Case Study of Scientific Methodology
William D. Stansfield
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The American Biology Teacher
Vol. 74 • No. 1
January 2012
Vol. 74 • No. 1
January 2012
animal welfare
DIABETES
experimental mistakes
Nobel Prize
self-experimentation
trial-and-error procedure