On 2015 Nov 12, Leonid Teytelman commented:
I think there are harder questions underneath this discussion. Is funding ENCODE-like projects a good idea? If so, which ones?
I agree with Sean Eddy that the misleading hype in the presentation of the ENCODE results was deplorable. I also agree that it is critical to develop common resources, datasets, and infrastructure. I would be crazy to argue that the enormous effort to sequence the human genome wasn't worth the money.
However, just because the human genome sequencing was a great idea, that doesn't necessarily mean all Big Science efforts are good ideas. The difficult question here is whether ENCODE itself was in fact a good idea. Was it a good use of the already over-stretched NIH budget? What else could we have done with that $200m? Were the resulting datasets enabling in a transformative way? If not, could funding for dedicated method and technology development on a fraction of the cost, have served the community better?
Michael Eisen asked these questions in Blinded by Big Science: The lesson I learned from ENCODE is that projects like ENCODE are not a good idea. Very hard to answer this, but if we don't, we may end up wasting a lot of money in the years to come.
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