I would like to start a discussion about giving bioinformatics support to other researchers (biologists), and when to stop giving support or end collaborations. Small background here, I am a bioinformatician at a small research institute for almost 5 years, and do the analysis for many projects mostly RNA-Seq data. Most of the experiments are with sound statistical design (biological replicates), and sometime researchers ask my advice about proper designs before the start the experiment (all good). However, I have encountered some researchers that come with data with poor designs, hence n=1 experiments. They disagree with that fact, and claim they have biological replicates, and say that it is a matter of opinion.
For example, they took cells from 5 (blood) donors, pooled it and then took 2 samples from this same pool to do some treatment. Then they claim they have n=2, but I say no this is a technical replicate here with n=1. No biological replicates, so I cannot do sound statistics here. At the end, after a ghastly discussion, (always with the "mice from the same strain are also genetically identical so who cares?" argument), the only thing I can do is to say that my collaboration stops here, I am not wasting time in n=1 experiments. I had this twice now, and I am wondering how other bioinformaticians deal with these situations? Please share your experiences or your manner to deal with these cases. Thanks.
As a contract bioinformatician (employed by a company), I perform the analysis, but tell the customers beforehand they will get crap results, and ask if they want to proceed anyway.
Side comment: I think an n=1 experiment is poor design, but at least it is honest. Pooling 5 samples, taking 2 technical samples from this pool and calling them biological replicates is, at best, an "honest mistake".
I guess this depends on your job description...