全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
PeerJ  2015 

Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.313

Keywords: Retraction,Correction,Erratum,Image manipulation,Social media,Science publishing

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Several online forums exist to facilitate open and/or anonymous discussion of the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Data integrity is a common discussion topic, and it is widely assumed that publicity surrounding such matters will accelerate correction of the scientific record. This study aimed to test this assumption by examining a collection of 497 papers for which data integrity had been questioned either in public or in private. As such, the papers were divided into two sub-sets: a public set of 274 papers discussed online, and the remainder a private set of 223 papers not publicized. The sources of alleged data problems, as well as criteria for defining problem data, and communication of problems to journals and appropriate institutions, were similar between the sets. The number of laboratory groups represented in each set was also similar (75 in public, 62 in private), as was the number of problem papers per laboratory group (3.65 in public, 3.54 in private). Over a study period of 18 months, public papers were retracted 6.5-fold more, and corrected 7.7-fold more, than those in the private set. Parsing the results by laboratory group, 28 laboratory groups in the public set had papers which received corrective action, versus 6 laboratory groups in the private set. For those laboratory groups in the public set with corrected/retracted papers, the fraction of their papers acted on was 62% of those initially flagged, whereas in the private set this fraction was 27%. Such clustering of actions suggests a pattern in which correction/retraction of one paper from a group correlates with more corrections/retractions from the same group, with this pattern being stronger in the public set. It is therefore concluded that online discussion enhances levels of corrective action in the scientific literature. Nevertheless, anecdotal discussion reveals substantial room for improvement in handling of such matters.

References

[1]  Bosch X. 2013. Research integrity: journals should be clear on misconduct. Nature 497:40
[2]  Couzin-Frankel J. 2013. Author of popular blog that charged fraud unmasked. Science 339:132
[3]  Fang FC, Casadevall A. 2011. Retracted science and the retraction index. Infection and Immunity 79:3855-3859
[4]  Fang FC, Steen RG, Casadevall A. 2012. Misconduct accounts for the majority of retracted scientific publications. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109:17028-17033
[5]  Grieneisen ML, Zhang M. 2012. A comprehensive survey of retracted articles from the scholarly literature. PLoS ONE 7:e44118
[6]  Mole VIII. 2012. The end of science. Journal of Cell Science 125:5907-5909
[7]  Oransky I, Marcus A. 2012. We’re mostly wrong but trust us. Is the “mega-correction” here to stay? Lab Times 2012_01:43 http://www.labtimes.org/labtimes/issues/lt2012/lt01/lt_2012_01_43_43.pdf
[8]  Parak WJ, Chan WCW, Hafner JH, Hammond PT, Hersam MC, Javey A, Khademhosseini A, Kotov NA, Mulvaney P, Nel AE, Nordlander PJ, Penner RM, Rogach AL, Schaak RE, Stevens MM, Wee ATS, Willson CG, Weiss PS. 2013. Be critical but fair. ACS Nano 7:8313-8316
[9]  Resnik DB, Dinse GE. 2013. Scientific retractions and corrections related to misconduct findings. Journal of Medical Ethics 39:46-50
[10]  Steen RG. 2011. Retractions in the scientific literature: is the incidence of research fraud increasing? Journal of Medical Ethics 37:249-253
[11]  Steen RG, Casadevall A, Fang FC. 2013. Why has the number of scientific retractions increased? PLoS ONE 8:e68397

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133