THIRD OF
U.S. SCIENTISTS SURVEYED
ADMIT TO MISCONDUCT
Maura Lerner
Star Tribune
One in three U.S. scientists admitted in an anonymous survey
that they
committed scientific misconduct in the previous three years, according
to a
report by a team of Minnesota researchers.
While falsifying research is uncommon, the survey found that 33 percent
of
scientists admitted breaking rules, large and small, that are supposed
to
ensure the honesty of their work, the authors report in the British
journal
Nature.
The
types of misbehavior range from claiming credit for someone else's
work, to
changing results because of pressure from the sponsor.
"Our findings suggest that U.S. scientists engage in a range of behaviors
extending
far beyond falsification, fabrication and plagiarism that can damage
the
integrity of science," the authors write in a commentary piece in
tomorrow's journal.
The survey, which was led by Brian Martinson of the HealthPartners
Research
Foundation in Bloomington, questioned more than 3,200 scientists
around the
country about a long list of questionable actions. They range from
outright
fraud to improper relationships with research subjects.
Among the findings: 15 percent said they had changed the design,
methods or
results of a study in response to pressure from a financial sponsor.
Fewer than 1 percent admitted to "falsifying or cooking research
data." Slightly more, 1.4 percent, said they had potentially improper
relationships with students or subjects.
But significantly more -- 12.5 percent -- said they had overlooked
others
scientists' use of flawed data or questionable interpretations. And 7
percent
admitted ignoring "minor" rules for protecting human subjects. Six
percent said that they failed to report data that contradicted their
previous
work.
Martinson, a sociologist, said the fact that a third of those surveyed admitted
to one
of the
top
ten violations suggests the problem
doesn't lie with a few "bad apples."
Scientists,
he said, are "one of the hardest-working groups of people that I
know." But he said there may be something about their working
environment
-- the mountains of rules, the pressure to compete for grants and
produce
results -- that ends up compromising their ethics.
"There's been this kind of idea that scientists... are super-humans or
something, that they're immune from these kinds of pressure," he said.
"But scientists are human."
He said this is the first survey of its kind, so it is not known
whether the
misbehavior is more common now than in the past.
June
9, 2005 BADSCIENCE0609
Maura
Lerner is at mlerner@startribune.com
<mailto:mlerner@startribune.com>.