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This is not in any way relevant to me, I'm just interested. What would happen if you chose a PhD thesis to work on, and halfway through someone somewhere in the world who was also doing a PhD in the same field published their thesis, which just happened to be the same research that you were doing. Would your research still be considered since it was done independently? Does this happen often? Are there safeguards to prevent this from happening, like would you normally search the academic field to see if anyone else is working on the same topic? Surely that would be almost impossible to do?

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    Highly relevant PhD Comic.
    – ff524
    May 17, 2017 at 3:41
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    I knew someone this happened to. He started over from scratch with a different problem. (Field: microbiology.) May 17, 2017 at 4:34
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    I believe in many cases the thesis advisor's expertise and being aware of what others in the immediate fields could be working on can provide some guardrails. This is not a guarantee by any means. But usually a PhD research is in a specialty area that the advisor should have a good sense of the "lay of the land" nearby. May 17, 2017 at 22:35
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    PhD Comic #798 Best advice Ever! May 18, 2017 at 9:39

3 Answers 3

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A lot of it depends on how far along you are, your institution, your career goals, and to some extent whether its your fault or not. That is, you DEFINITELY need to search the literature to see if your topic was already studied. But sometimes, someone might just have the same idea because they are thinking about the same issues and reading the same existing literature as you are.

If someone scoops you, it's likely a lot of your work won't be publishable anymore. In some fields it might be possible to publish as a replication (with low impact) or it may be that if you look carefully there is some areas of non-overlap that you can run with. The issue of publication will matter a lot more if you want a career in academia: you need a strong publication record to move on to the next phase of your career. In that circumstance, it might actually be better to delay your PhD just to get some publications, unless you expect you can get a good post doc regardless.

If you are early in your work, even halfway, it may be possible to switch topics. It's also possible all you need is a minor shift. I got scooped. Twice. Both times it hurt, but both times I also realized that there wasn't anywhere near 100% overlap, and my work was still publishable, it just took some extra time to rework things, reemphasize novelty, etc.

Overall, though, your PhD should be awarded for the work you do, not necessarily whether the work pans out. Your institution shouldn't prevent you from getting a PhD if you have been scooped. Negotiating all these issues should be the role of your thesis committee. The thesis committee should be comprised of at least some relatively unbiased professors who can judge whether or not your work is acceptable. The point of the PhD should be to train to be a researcher. Sometimes being scooped is part of the learning experience.

(note: I am answering this mostly from the perspective of biological sciences in the US - of course there may be differences by field and location)

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    It's quite sad that these are the considerations. As scientists, we ought to be celebrating a replication of results. May 17, 2017 at 15:00
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    @Shufflepants Agreed, but the current reality is that, even though replications can be published, there isn't any venue that treats replications as equivalent to novel results, and I don't see that changing ever for top journals like Nature and Science or their field-specific equivalents. Certainly a replication will never be cited at the same level as a novel result, barring special circumstances.
    – Bryan Krause
    May 17, 2017 at 15:12
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    "your PhD should be awarded for the work you do" - well, a part of the requirements for a PhD is indeed that you have actually adv anced the knowledge in the field, not just that you put in a certain amount of work that "could have" advanced knowledge under different circumstances. May 17, 2017 at 15:41
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    @O.R.Mapper I see no purpose to denying the PhD degree to someone whose research is scooped at the last moment - their training is no less complete. I'm sure institutional guidelines vary but I looked back at my program and there is no stated requirement that a PhD dissertation "advanced knowledge in the field" - it's really left up to the thesis committee to decide when a dissertation is sufficient. The program I graduated from expects the thesis to contain multiple "publishable" papers, but does not specify beyond that.
    – Bryan Krause
    May 17, 2017 at 16:33
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    I'd add that "advancing the knowledge in the field" really just refers to original research. It is quite possible for someone to do original research simultaneously with another individual. As I suggest in my answer, it's pretty rare for there to be complete 100% overlap with someone else's work, it is simply that there may be barriers to publication of work that is substantially similar to something that was just recently published. It would be a completely different situation, in my opinion, if a student unknowingly reproduced earlier work due to poor literature review.
    – Bryan Krause
    May 17, 2017 at 16:36
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Just start comparing to their works in your papers, explain clearly what you are doing differently and why the differences are relevant. Very rarely exactly everything will be the same, as long as it isn't - start focusing on describing the differences or additions that your work includes compared to the other works and stressing that your work was done simultaneously and independently.


Also practice in having in your head (but no where else!) several independently developed rephrasings / refocusings of your work can be a good thing. Kind of the same idea as to never show all your cards at once in a card game but have jokers up your sleeves / back up strategies et.c.

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Here is a perspective from (pure) mathematics.

It is not that unusual in mathematics that a problem is solved (almost) simultaneously by two different people, one of whom will sometimes be a PhD student. Generally, both papers end up being published, and are treated as independent discovery; later on the student can include it in their thesis. This makes sense, especially since the ideas involved in both works will usually be different so both are useful to the community. (Publishing new proofs of old results is also not unheard of, but usually carries much less prestige, presumably a bit like replication studies elsewhere.) In borderline cases, the students tend to be treated slightly more leniently than established researchers, since it is understood that publications matter more to them (it may or may not help they have a supervisor who is often a well-respected researcher).

It should also be pointed out that PhD students will generally not embark upon projects which take many years to complete, so the window for simultaneous discovery is much shorter. Even if one tries to attack a big problem which takes a lot of time and effort, if any progress is being made then interesting results will appear in the process and hopefully be published (if this is not the case, it would be doubtful if the big theorem is likely to be proved at all).

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    "Publishing new proofs of old results is also not unheard of, but usually carries much less prestige, presumably a bit like replication studies elsewhere." In case anyone is interested, an example showing your inclusion of "usually" is needed is Selberg's "elementary proof" of the prime number theorem. May 17, 2017 at 15:11

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