Difference between revisions of "Resource:4c699ab2-c114-4fc0-ad52-f1917928fcad"

From The Embassy of Good Science
 
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{{Resource
 
{{Resource
 
|Resource Type=Cases
 
|Resource Type=Cases
|Title=Collateral Damage in a Biology Institute
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|Title=A Japanese developmental biology center, scientific misconduct and suicide
|Is About=In 2014 in a high ranking stem cell research institute in Japan a research misconduct case came to light. The case was excessively covered by the media. The media not only portrayed the accused scientists as perpetrators, the entire research centre was critized. The  the entire research centre 'felt under attack'.
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|Is About=In 2014 in a stemcell research institute in Japan a research misconduct case came to light. The case was excessively covered by the media, with the media not only portraying the accused scientists as perpetrators, but criticizing the entire research centre. One of the members of the research centre committed suicide, causing upheaval in the Japanese research scene. As the case describes, the damage of the scientific misonconduct reaches far beyond the misconduct itself.
 
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|Important Because=Scientific misconduct cases should be dealt with carefully, with appropriate protections in place for those that did not commit the misconduct. The 'side effects' of misconduct, including reputational damage, should be minimized or restored when a person or institute has been inaccurately accsued of misconduct.
how it affects others who are not directly involved in the case. This is a factual case. The topic is stem cell research.
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|Important For=Researchers; Early career researchers; PhD students; Research performing organisations; Research funding organisations; Media
|Important Because=Revelations of scientific misconduct always cause collateral damage<ref>Cyranoski, David. "Collateral damage: How one misconduct case brought a biology institute to its knees." ''Nature'' 520.7549 (2015).</ref>.
 
<references />
 
|Important For=Researchers
 
 
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{{Tags
 
{{Tags
|Involves=Haruko Obokata
 
 
|Has Timepoint=2014
 
|Has Timepoint=2014
 
|Has Location=Japan
 
|Has Location=Japan

Latest revision as of 15:12, 5 October 2020

Cases

A Japanese developmental biology center, scientific misconduct and suicide

What is this about?

In 2014 in a stemcell research institute in Japan a research misconduct case came to light. The case was excessively covered by the media, with the media not only portraying the accused scientists as perpetrators, but criticizing the entire research centre. One of the members of the research centre committed suicide, causing upheaval in the Japanese research scene. As the case describes, the damage of the scientific misonconduct reaches far beyond the misconduct itself.

Why is this important?

Scientific misconduct cases should be dealt with carefully, with appropriate protections in place for those that did not commit the misconduct. The 'side effects' of misconduct, including reputational damage, should be minimized or restored when a person or institute has been inaccurately accsued of misconduct.

For whom is this important?

Other information

When
Where
Good Practices & Misconduct
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