Aging research

Thanks for your help and guidance. I agree that for now it's not worth it!

Is it worth updating the style guide for the  "[Area] research"  convention or is it too niche and may add unnecessary bloat?

Good point. I weakly lean towards not updating it, since there are only a handful of articles that fit that template. But if you or others think this should be included, just let me know.

I didn't really have a preference to be honest! I was just curious and a  little confused by the fact that some posts and  one of the "further reading links" used the "anti-aging" terminology.

Thank you for point about the general format being "[Area] research" - that makes sense and will be useful to me for potential future wiki edits. Also thank you to the other comment for the "cancer research" analogy  - that makes sense too. 

Is it worth updating the style guide for the  "[Area] research"  convention or is it too niche and may add unnecessary bloat?

I guess they think that the purpose of the research is to slow aging, and that the name should make that clear. (Cf the question: "Or is it to maintain some kind of fact/value distinction? )

But I would probably disagree with that rationale. E.g. even though the purpose of research on cancer is to prevent cancer, it's called "cancer research", not "anti-cancer research". Analogously, I think that "aging research" is preferable to "anti-aging research".

My impression was that, as you say, "Aging research" is the more established name for the field. Moreover, the general form we've been using for articles about research on specific areas is "[Area] research". By contrast, "Anti-aging research" seems to emphasize the purpose of the research rather than the research area.

Could you elaborate on why you think "Anti-aging research" is preferable (if this is in fact what you think)?

May I ask for the reasoning for the title being "Aging research" as opposed to "Anti-aging research"? 

I must assume it's because the former is the name established in the academic literature? Or is it to maintain some kind of fact/value distinction? 

Thanks in advance!

5
Pablo
My impression was that, as you say, "Aging research" is the more established name for the field. Moreover, the general form we've been using for articles about research on specific areas is "[Area] research". By contrast, "Anti-aging research" seems to emphasize the purpose of the research rather than the research area. Could you elaborate on why you think "Anti-aging research" is preferable (if this is in fact what you think)?
5
Stefan_Schubert
I guess they think that the purpose of the research is to slow aging, and that the name should make that clear. (Cf the question: "Or is it to maintain some kind of fact/value distinction? ) But I would probably disagree with that rationale. E.g. even though the purpose of research on cancer is to prevent cancer, it's called "cancer research", not "anti-cancer research". Analogously, I think that "aging research" is preferable to "anti-aging research".
3
Azure
I didn't really have a preference to be honest! I was just curious and a  little confused by the fact that some posts and  one of the "further reading links" used the "anti-aging" terminology. Thank you for point about the general format being "[Area] research" - that makes sense and will be useful to me for potential future wiki edits. Also thank you to the other comment for the "cancer research" analogy  - that makes sense too.  Is it worth updating the style guide for the  "[Area] research"  convention or is it too niche and may add unnecessary bloat?
3
Pablo
Good point. I weakly lean towards not updating it, since there are only a handful of articles that fit that template. But if you or others think this should be included, just let me know.
3
Azure
Thanks for your help and guidance. I agree that for now it's not worth it!