@elduvelle @neuralreckoning @ct_bergstrom
People get all worked up over negative results, but a real negative result is actually really hard to show. The problem is that a negative result can be negative for lots of reasons, most of them boring.
For example, maybe the DREADD didn't affect rat behavior because there was no DREADD in the virus. (That happened to us once.) Or maybe the human subject pool was tasked wrong because they didn't understand the instructions. (That happened to us once.)
To get a real negative result, you have to have positive controls to show that all of the techniques are doing what you think they are and that the negative result is not a consequence of a trivial outcome.
Yes, you need controls for positive results as well, but it's easier to determine what those controls are, and reviewers tend to demand those controls. People who try and fail to publish negative results almost never have the right controls for those negative results (which are not the same at all as the controls you need for the positive results). A well-structure negative result experiment should be very publishable.