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Journals Tackle Scientific Fraud
By Drog, Section News
Posted on Wed Feb 08, 2006 at 07:25:17 AM PST

Books After a rapid succession of cases of major scientific fraud, scientific journals are questioning the effectiveness of the current peer review system and asking what their role should be in policing fraud.

Less than a month after the confirmation that Korean scientist Hwang Woo-Suk's cloning results were falsified, another case was discovered. A Norwegian researcher had made up patient histories of about 900 people for a study on cancer. Richard Horton, the editor of The Lancet, in which the research appeared, has responded to the scandal, "Peer review is a great system for detecting badly done research, but if you have an investigator determined to fabricate an entire study, it is not possible to pick it up."

From Wikinews:

While carefully examining the data for every publication would be prohibitively expensive, several techniques to screen for falsified data have been developed. For example, images can be checked for after-the-fact manipulation. The scandals have led to some readers looking more carefully at suspicious papers for evidence that the data are human-manufactured. Jan Hendrik Schön's fraud was partly revealed due to just such analysis by readers in 2002.

Some institutions are taking further steps to prevent fraud. In October, Emory University introduced a tip line where people can anonymously report suspicions of scientific misconduct. So far, five investigations have been launched based on reports to the tip line.

While many steps are being taken to deter future scandals, some scientists have pointed out that such fraud does not discredit all science. Dieter Imboden, the president of the Swiss National Science Foundation's Research Council, has said: "Bear in mind that every experiment will be repeated at some stage and it is one of the important principles of science that only things which can be verified independently by different groups are considered to be safe scientific facts."

Related Wikinews

Sources

Journals Tackle Scientific Fraud | 1 comment (1 topical, 0 hidden)

Interesting (none / 0) (#1)
by apsmith on Wed Feb 08, 2006 at 09:05:28 AM PST
I've just finished attending a scholarly publishing meeting here in DC, and this was indeed one of the topics covered - in a talk title "Still Safe at Any Speed?" by Brian Crawford of the American Chemical Society. He mentioned a number of technologies publishers may start looking at to try to automatically catch more of these things:
  • checking cited references (validity, relevance)
  • checking for deposited data (if that's a requirement of the publication, automatically ensure a URL provided contains what it should, of right sort and size of content etc)
  • plagiarism checks - looking for matching content in other articles
  • forensic image analysis, to catch "photoshopping" etc.
  • statistical analysis - looking for digit preferences (non-randomness) in the experimental numbers for instance
  • other tools to check experimental data validity.

It's sad we have to impose such things, but scientists are human too, and can be influenced by their own personal views and egos and interests. One problem specifically mentioned at the meeting was authors who don't disclose conflicts of interest in bio-medical clinical trials, that may favor a drug for instance that they have a financial interest in. Journals have definitely become a lot more aware of the problems recently.


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Journals Tackle Scientific Fraud | 1 comment (1 topical, 0 hidden)

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Related Science Links
· scientific fraud
· peer review
· Hwang Woo-Suk's
· The Lancet
· From Wikinews:
· Jan Hendrik Schön's
· Emory University
· "Lancet cancer study a hoax"
· "Norwegian scientist published fake findings in Lancet"
· "South Korean scientists clone dog for first time"
· "Should journals police scientific fraud?"
· "Doctor admits Lancet study is fiction"
· "Emory's fraud tip line aims to keep science honest"
· ""It's difficult to prevent scientific fraud""
· More on Books
· Also by Drog

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