Episode 28

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Published on:

26th Jan 2026

28: Published Does Not Mean Proven - The Shocking Truth About Scientific Corrections with Dr. Rob Karlinsey

What if some of the research shaping everyday products is quietly flawed, and the system designed to correct it often chooses not to?

In this episode of Dental Formulator’s Playbook, Dr. Rob and co-host Tami take a deep, unfiltered look at scientific ethics and research accountability. Prompted by recent survey data and real-world case studies, the conversation explores how flawed or falsified research can enter the scientific record and why it so often remains there uncorrected.

Rather than focusing on isolated mistakes, this episode examines systemic behaviors. These include informal admissions, delayed accountability, and the reluctance to issue corrections or retractions even when problems are known. From high-profile superconductivity claims to modern AI-driven research, Dr. Rob explains why transparency, replication, and proper testing models are essential, especially when scientific papers are used to justify claims in oral care products and other consumer-facing technologies.

This discussion challenges listeners to think more critically about what “published” really means and how to evaluate research beyond headlines and abstracts.

Key Topics Covered

  1. Findings from a published survey examining how often chemists knowingly falsify information in scientific papers
  2. What falsification can look like beyond simple errors, including selective data presentation and procedural shortcuts
  3. Why many researchers avoid formal corrections and how those decisions are commonly rationalized
  4. Informal and non-public ways errors are addressed instead of correcting the scientific record
  5. How scrutiny can occur outside traditional journals through independent review and public forums
  6. A detailed case study involving high-profile superconductivity claims and failed replication attempts
  7. Why highly publicized fields like AI attract attention, while similar ethics risks exist across all areas of science
  8. How Dr. Rob evaluates whether research is trustworthy, relevant, and clinically meaningful
  9. The role of appropriate models, controls, and independent replication in supporting oral care product claims

Highlights and Takeaways

  1. Published does not mean proven. Peer-reviewed publication alone is not a guarantee of accuracy or reliability.
  2. The scientific record often remains uncorrected. Many known issues are never formally addressed through corrections or retractions.
  3. Replication is essential. When independent groups cannot reproduce results, confidence in those findings should decrease.
  4. Models and controls matter. Meaningful positive and negative controls are critical for interpreting results responsibly.
  5. Bias influences what gets promoted. Financial incentives, career pressure, and marketing interests can shape scientific narratives.

Reference Links

Karlinsey & Karlinsey – Recently Published Research

Methods and Protocols paper examining formulation science and measurement models:

https://doi.org/10.3390/mps9010010

Scientific Accountability and Publication Ethics

Survey findings discussed by Accountability in Research and ACS Chemical & Engineering News on deliberate inclusion of misleading information in published papers:

https://doi.org/10.1080/08989621.2025.2564106

https://cen.acs.org/policy/publishing/One-five-chemists-deliberately-added/103/web/2025/10

Retracted Superconductivity Papers (Science and Nature)

Commentary and official retraction notices for eight papers in Science and one paper in Nature:

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.298.5595.961b

https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01467

University of Rochester Superconductivity Retractions (Nature 2020 & 2023)

Editorial notices addressing retracted claims of room-temperature superconductivity:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05294-9

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05742-0.epdf

Fraudulent AI Research Activity at MIT

Wall Street Journal reporting and official MIT statement addressing inaccurate research records and ethics concerns:

https://www.wsj.com/economy/aidan-toner-rodgers-mit-ai-research-78753243

https://economics.mit.edu/news/assuring-accurate-research-record

📲 Connect with Dr. Rob (Robert L. Karlinsey, PhD)

🌐 Website: customdentalformulations.com

Robert L. Karlinsey, PhD

Google Scholar Profile

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About the Podcast

Dental Formulator's Playbook
The Dental Formulator’s Playbook is where science meets strategy in the world of oral health innovation. Hosted by Dr. Rob Karlinsey, a seasoned dental researcher and independent formulator, this podcast is your behind-the-scenes pass to what really goes into creating cutting-edge dental products.

Whether you're a dentist, a dental brand, or just someone curious about how toothpaste, rinses, and other oral care products are developed, you'll find practical insights and real-world takeaways in every episode. Dr. Karlinsey keeps it straightforward and engaging—no fluff, just clear, thoughtful explanations based on years of experience in the lab and the industry.

This show is all about helping dental professionals and product developers think differently, make better decisions, and stay ahead of the curve. If you care about science, results, and doing things the right way, you're in the right place.

About your host

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Robert Karlinsey

Dr. Robert L. Karlinsey is a scientist and formulator with almost 20 years’ experience in dental research. He earned a BS in Physics (University of Scranton) and PhD in Chemical Physics (Indiana University), with postdoctoral work in physical chemistry (Indiana University). As a visiting assistant research professor at the Indiana University School of Dentistry, his research led to an impactful encounter with Dr. George Stookey, and shortly thereafter, the formation of Indiana Nanotech, LLC (now known as Custom Dental Formulations, LLC), of which he spearheaded all research and small-scale manufacturing efforts. Dr. Karlinsey is the inventor of Nanotech’s functionalized tricalcium phosphate systems, which continue to help generate over $100MM in global product sales for a major dental manufacturer. As Principal Investigator, his work has received significant funding through Federal (National Institutes of Health), State (Indiana and Texas), and industry grants and contracts. His research in patented calcium phosphate technologies continue to help generate over $100MM in global product sales. Previously, Dr. Karlinsey has served as Chief Scientific Officer at Therametric Technologies, Inc, and adjunct professor of chemistry at the University of Indianapolis.

Dr. Karlinsey addresses clients’ needs in preventive and cosmetic dentistry, including fluoride- and fluoride-free remineralization, antiplaque/gum health, whitening systems, and more. He is actively involved in clinical and laboratory research designs and performance-backed, customized oral care formulation solutions. And, whenever possible, he favors natural, nature-derived, and/or sustainably sourced ingredients