Fraud, fakery, or larceny is what ordinary people would call it. But in the sciences’ refined venues the proper term is “misconduct,” and there’s a lot more of it than official figures show, according to a report in Nature (19 June), “Repairing research integrity." >>>
July 17, 2008
Detecting Scientific Fraud : The Chronicle Review
Fraud, fakery, or larceny is what ordinary people would call it. But in the sciences’ refined venues the proper term is “misconduct,” and there’s a lot more of it than official figures show, according to a report in Nature (19 June), “Repairing research integrity." >>>
July 3, 2008
Allow me to rephrase, and boost my tally of articles: THE
July 1, 2008
Publish or perish, but at what cost?
Random Posts
Combating plagiarism: a shared responsibility
Sujit D Rathod Indian J Med Ethics.2010 Jul-Sep;7(3) ABSTRACT Scientific progress depends on the free dissemination of original thinking and research. With the evidence base formed by publication, investigators develop and implement additional studies, and policy makers propose new laws and regul... READ MORE>>
Japanese Plagiarism and Misrepresentation Case
Debora Weber-WulffA Japanese correspondent has alerted me to the strange case of Serkan Anilir. He is a German-born researcher of Turkish descent who was said to be an Assistant Professor at the Department of Architecture, Graduate School of Engineering, the University of Tokyo.He has an impressive ... READ MORE>>
Articles withdrawn from Open Access Database
Debora Weber-Wulff I just ran across an article from 2007 about arXiv.org, one of the many Open Access databases, that withdrew 65 papers on General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology by 14 Turkish authors on the basis of the papers containing plagiarized material. One of the authors, a grad student a... READ MORE>>
Scientists informally intervene in cases of sloppy research - Ars Technica
John TimmerMost people involved in scientific research are well aware of the big three ethical lapses: fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism. These acts are considered to have such a large potential for distorting the scientific record that governments, research institutions, and funding bodies... READ MORE>>
Prof Faces Plagiarism Charge
Shanghai Daily A university professor is at the center of a plagiarism scandal after he was accused of copying from books written by Western researchers in his doctoral dissertation.Zhu Xueqin, a history professor at Shanghai University, denied the online accusation after a newspaper report about t... READ MORE>>
Journals step up plagiarism policing
Nature 466, 167 (2010), doi:10.1038/466167a Cut-and-paste culture tackled by CrossCheck software. Declan Butler Major science publishers are gearing up to fight plagiarism. The publishers, including Elsevier and Springer, are set to roll out software across their journals that will scan submitted pa... READ MORE>>
Plagiarism pinioned
NATURE/EDITORIAL doi:10.1038/466159b Published online 07 July 2010 There are tools to detect non-originality in articles, but instilling ethical norms remains essentialIt is both encouraging and disheartening to hear that major science publishers intend to roll out the CrossCheck plagiarism-sc... READ MORE>>
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