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Research Misconduct. Research Misconduct. Examples of Misconduct. Ptolemy may have copied sky charts 2.Paul Kammerer (1920s) faked breeding results in toads using India ink. Sponsored Programs. Examples of Misconduct. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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  • * Research Misconduct

  • *Research Misconduct

  • * Examples of Misconduct

    Ptolemy may have copied sky charts

    2.Paul Kammerer (1920s) faked breeding results in toads using India ink

    Sponsored Programs

  • *Sponsored Programs++3.William T. Summerlin (1970s) faked results of skin transplants on mice with a black felt-tip pen

    4.(2005-06) Dr. Woo Suk Hwang of South Korea was found guilty of research misconduct

    5.(2006) Jon Sudb falsified data in clinical research and reported funding from a non-existent grant

    Examples of Misconduct

  • Scientific FraudThere are many examples of published studies or report that have been later found incorrect, misleading, or fraudulent.These are always detected, eventually due to the scientific method and peer review.The net effect is loss of time, resources, and public mistrust.Significant recent examples:MMR Vaccine / Autism studySpeed of Himalayan glacier meltingHuman stem cell cloning study*

  • *What is Research Misconduct?Fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism inproposing, performing, or reviewing research, or in reporting research results

    OSTP Definition

  • OSTPThe Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) is an office in the Executive Office of the President (EOP), established by United States Congress on May 11, 1976, with a broad mandate to advise the President on the effects of science and technology on domestic and international affairs.

  • *Fabrication is making up data or results and recording or reporting them.

    Falsification is manipulating research materials, equipment, or processes, or changing or omitting data or results such that the research is not accurately represented in the research record.

    Plagiarism is the appropriation of another persons ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit

  • *

    Research misconduct does not include honest differences of opinion

  • * Represent a significant departure from accepted practices

    Have been committed intentionally, or knowingly, or recklessly

    Be proven by a preponderance of evidence.

    Legal Parameters

  • *Not in the OSTP Misconduct Definition, but Sometimes Included in Institutional Definitions Violation of Federal rules Abuse of confidentiality Authorship or publication violations Failure to report misconduct Obstruction of misconduct investigation Retaliation against whistleblowers

  • * Sexual Harassment Misuse of funds (financial fraud) Gross negligence of persons in their professional duties Vandalism (including tampering with experiments and instructions Violations of research responsibility (animals, DNA) Whistle-blowing Cover-up of misconduct Malicious allegationsActions That Are Not Misconduct

  • *Questionable Research Practices (Not Scientific Misconduct)

    1.Failing to retain significant research data for a reasonable period

    2.Maintaining inadequate research records, especially for results that are published or are relied on by others

    3. Conferring or requesting authorship on the basis of a specialized service or contribution that is not significantly related to the research reported in the paper

  • *

    4. Refusing to give peers reasonable access to unique research materials or data that could support published papers

    5. Using inappropriate statistical or other methods of measurement to enhance the significance of research findings

    6. Inadequately supervising research subordinates or exploiting them

    Questionable Research Practices (Not Scientific Misconduct)

  • *Questionable Research Practices (Not Scientific Misconduct)

    7. Misrepresenting speculations as fact or releasing preliminary research results, especially in the public media, without providing sufficient data to allow peers to judge the validity of the results or to reproduce the experiments

  • *Why Does It Occur?Poor supervisionToo much workLack of trainingLack of interestFame and fortuneProve a held theoryCut corners

  • *If.1.the data seem too good to be true, they probably are.2.the author cranks out one publication after another, question his research practices.3.a researcher says her plagiarism is a one-time indiscretion---check further (it probably isnt).

  • *WhistleblowersNAS:someone who has witnessed misconduct has an unmistaken obligation to act.Protected under the 1st Amendment and the False Claims Act of 1986Individuals will report misconduct only if their institution has a viable support/protection system in place

  • *Whistleblowers (continued)2/3 of whistleblowers report at least one negative outcome:pressure to drop allegationscounter-allegationsostracized by colleaguesfired/denied promotionsthreats of suits/being sued

    3/4 of whistleblowers would do it again!

  • *Sanctions1.)Retract articles already in print2.)Surrender or suspend grants or contracts3.)Letters of Reprimand4.)Imposition of Special RequirementsCertificationSenior PI to oversee work and assure correctness5.)Rescind privilege of serving as PI6.)Rescind graduate faculty status7.)Termination of employment8.)Students: expulsion

  • * Parting Advice Follow the general norms of science and the specific norms of your discipline.

    Violations of the publics trust in science are devastating to all.

    Do the right thing!

    If in doubt, dont!

    **