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

From The Embassy of Good Science
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|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
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|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
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|Important Because=By recognizing these pitfalls and responding appropriately can save a career and strengthen science.
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|Important For=Early career researchers; Junior researchers; PhD Students; Graduate students; Undergraduate students; Academic staff
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|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”.
 
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{{Link
 
{{Link
 
|Has Link=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-05145-6
 
|Has Link=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-05145-6
 
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{{Related To}}
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{{Related To
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|Related To Resource=Resource:67faeb3a-593c-473e-899d-4fb29abaa1b9;Resource:5aefe751-0a20-4597-98a5-a59bf06a987a
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|Related To Theme=Theme:46e89570-c93b-41ca-9ac7-d78826bdfad8
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{{Tags
 
{{Tags
 
|Involves=Nature
 
|Involves=Nature
 
|Has Timepoint=2018
 
|Has Timepoint=2018
|Has Virtue And Value=Reliability
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|Has Virtue And Value=Reliability; Accuracy; Honesty; Objectivity
|Has Good Practice And Misconduct=Research misconduct; Mentor/trainee relationship
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|Has Good Practice And Misconduct=Research misconduct; Mentor/trainee relationship; Adherence to Regulations; Cherry picking
|Related To Research Area=LS - Life Sciences
 
 
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Latest revision as of 16:35, 21 October 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”.
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