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    ILAR J. 2005;46(4):332-7.

    Observation and cogitation: how serendipity provides the building blocks of scientific discovery.

    Source

    American College of Zoological Medicine, Wildlife and Aquatic Medicine and Environmental and Molecular Toxicology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA.

    Abstract

    The identification of serendipitous findings in field-based animal research is challenging in part because investigators are reluctant to declare a discovery accidental. Investigators recognize that many factors must be considered. For example, the impact of using carefully ordered observational search patterns in ecologic, pathologic, and epidemiologic investigations could result in findings being categorized as "sought" versus "unsought." Team collaborations are common in these types of investigations and have advantages related to the application of multiple paradigms, paradigm mixing, and paradigm shifting. This approach reduces the perception of serendipity. Issues of search image refinement and the co-discovery of sought and unsought discoveries additionally cloud the identification of a truly serendipitous finding. Nevertheless, basic curiosity and observation are necessary precursors to scientific discovery. It should be recognized that serendipitous discoveries are of significant value in the advancement of science and often present the foundation for important intellectual leaps of understanding.

    PMID:
    16179740
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    Free full text

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