Difference between revisions of "Resource:Acc068ac-a0c0-48fa-b6a2-ff7448bf2573"

From The Embassy of Good Science
(Created page with "{{Resource |Resource Type=Education |Title=Nine pitfalls of research misconduct |Is About=podcast or podcasts collection: Nature podcast series |Important For=Early career res...")
 
Line 2: Line 2:
 
|Resource Type=Education
 
|Resource Type=Education
 
|Title=Nine pitfalls of research misconduct
 
|Title=Nine pitfalls of research misconduct
|Is About=podcast or podcasts collection: Nature podcast series
+
|Is About=This publication is about recornising 9 factors that lead to bad decisions by researchers and can be represented by the acronym TRAGEDIES. Each letter presents one factor, which poses for a specific behavioral aspect, that leads to pitfalls when conducting and analysing research data.
|Important For=Early career researchers; Junior researchers; PhD Students; Graduate students; Undergraduate students
+
|Important Because=By recognizing these pitfalls and responding appropriately can save a career and strengthen science.
 +
|Important For=Early career researchers; Junior researchers; PhD Students; Graduate students; Undergraduate students; Academic staff
 +
|Has Best Practice=Avoid the following pitfalls (behavioral aspect with an example): (a) Temptation - “Getting my name on this article would look really good on my CV”, (b) Rationalization - “It’s only a few data points, and those runs were flawed anyway”, (c) Ambition - “The better the story we can tell, the better a journal we can go for”, (d) Group and authority pressure - “The PI’s instructions don’t exactly match the protocol approved by the ethics review board, but she is the senior researcher”, (e) Entitlement - “I’ve worked so hard on this, and I know this works, and I need to get this publication”, (f) Deception - “I’m sure it would have turned out this way (if I had done it)”, (g) Incrementalism - “It’s only a single data point I’m excluding, and just this once”, (h) Embarrassment - “I don’t want to look foolish for not knowing how to do this”, (i) Stupid systems, “It counts more if we divide this manuscript into three submissions instead of just one”.
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Link
 
{{Link
 
|Has Link=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-05145-6
 
|Has Link=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-05145-6
 
}}
 
}}
{{Related To}}
+
{{Related To
 +
|Related To Resource=Resource:67faeb3a-593c-473e-899d-4fb29abaa1b9;Resource:5aefe751-0a20-4597-98a5-a59bf06a987a
 +
|Related To Theme=Theme:46e89570-c93b-41ca-9ac7-d78826bdfad8
 +
|Related To Instruction=Instruction:Cc0d306a-0f3f-42a6-8b5b-ed9e21489a7f;Instruction:7503811e-e685-4311-8961-f44133b12280
 +
}}
 
{{Tags
 
{{Tags
 
|Involves=Nature
 
|Involves=Nature
 
|Has Timepoint=2018
 
|Has Timepoint=2018
|Has Virtue And Value=Reliability
+
|Has Virtue And Value=Reliability; Accuracy; Honesty; Objectivity
|Has Good Practice And Misconduct=Research misconduct; Mentor/trainee relationship
+
|Has Good Practice And Misconduct=Research misconduct; Mentor/trainee relationship; Adherence to Regulations; Cherry picking
|Related To Research Area=LS - Life Sciences
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 11:58, 2 September 2020

Education

Nine pitfalls of research misconduct

What is this about?

This publication is about recornising 9 factors that lead to bad decisions by researchers and can be represented by the acronym TRAGEDIES. Each letter presents one factor, which poses for a specific behavioral aspect, that leads to pitfalls when conducting and analysing research data.

Why is this important?

By recognizing these pitfalls and responding appropriately can save a career and strengthen science.

For whom is this important?

What are the best practices?

Avoid the following pitfalls (behavioral aspect with an example): (a) Temptation - “Getting my name on this article would look really good on my CV”, (b) Rationalization - “It’s only a few data points, and those runs were flawed anyway”, (c) Ambition - “The better the story we can tell, the better a journal we can go for”, (d) Group and authority pressure - “The PI’s instructions don’t exactly match the protocol approved by the ethics review board, but she is the senior researcher”, (e) Entitlement - “I’ve worked so hard on this, and I know this works, and I need to get this publication”, (f) Deception - “I’m sure it would have turned out this way (if I had done it)”, (g) Incrementalism - “It’s only a single data point I’m excluding, and just this once”, (h) Embarrassment - “I don’t want to look foolish for not knowing how to do this”, (i) Stupid systems, “It counts more if we divide this manuscript into three submissions instead of just one”.
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
5.1.6