Title: Research Misconduct International Issues
1Research MisconductInternational Issues
- Christine C. Boesz, Dr.P.H.
- Inspector General
- National Science Foundation, USA
- INORMS
- Brisbane, Australia
- 24 August 2006
2 Global Challenge
- Some cases of research misconduct have
- Attracted widespread media attention
- Eroded public confidence in science
- Caused concern in scientific communities
- Questioned role of government
- Other cases of research misconduct have
- Escaped public scrutiny, but
- Contribute to a growing body of evidence that
defines the problem
3Intra-country or Inter-country Issues
- Intra-country cases
- Erode public confidence in research integrity
- Raise domestic doubts on research and academic
communities abilities to promote responsible
conduct of research - Raise questions of governments role
responsiveness - Raise international concerns
- Strain international collaborations
4Intra-country Issues
- Single-country issues may include
- Policies and procedures may vary by stakeholder,
e.g., funder, publisher, university, private
laboratory - Inconsistent definitions
- Inconsistent standards of evidence
- Inconsistent findings
- Untimely actions
- Inconsistent sanctions
5Inter-country Issues
- Multiple country issues may include, but not be
limited to - Same as intra-country issues
- Differing rules or legal systems
- Differing cultures
- Differing constructs of ethical/legal issues
6Example of Differencesmisconduct in research
- United States government defines misconduct in
research as plagiarism and fabrication or
falsification of data. - Finland government defines misconduct in
research as gross negligence and
irresponsibility, e.g., understatement of
anothers contributions, negligence in referring
to earlier findings, publication of same results
several times.
7Example of Differences fraud
- United States government does not have a notion
of fraud in science. - Finland government (Board on Research Ethics)
considers fraud in science as deceiving the
research community and decision makers in 4
areas - Fabrication
- Misrepresentation (falsification)
- Fabrication
- Plagiarism
- Misappropriation
8So whats the problem?
- Ambiguous terminology among scientific
disciplines and among countries - Growing number of international collaborations
- Growing number of cross-discipline projects
- Demands of peer review, international reviewer
- Dependency on voluntary compliance
- In research and university communities
- In government and other funding organizations
9Case Study from the US
- National Science Foundation Standards
- Research community relevance Significant
departure from accepted practices - Intent Committed intentionally, or knowingly, or
recklessly - Legal Proven by preponderance of Evidence
- United States 45 Code of Federal Register
689.2(c)
10Case Study from the US
- Initial allegation
- Case development
- Case facts
- Conclusions
- Lessons learned
11Plagiarism means
- the appropriation of another persons
- ideas, processes or words without
giving - appropriate credit.
- Intellectual Property Theft
12Intellectual Property Theft
- Initial allegation
- A reviewer of an NSF proposal noticed that the
principal investigator (PI), an established
scientist, copied ideas and text from her
proposal that had previously been submitted to a
funding agency in another country (UK).
13Intellectual Property Theft
- Case development
- Complainant contacted to firmly establish
substance of the allegation - UK funding agency then contacted and provided
official information - Subject claimed a collaborative relationship (not
confirmed by complainant) - Subject intercepted OIG initial inquiry letter to
the Co-PI
14Intellectual Property Theft
- Case facts
- NSF PI was a reviewer of the UK agency proposal
- UK agency review predicated on confidentiality
- Plagiarism was extensive and confirmed on
proposal comparison - University committee established that a central
unique idea was stolen
15Intellectual Property Theft
- Conclusions
- Subject knowingly committed plagiarism
- Action exacerbated by the source document being a
confidential proposal - Interception of letter was subject's
self-protection - University terminated the subject's contract,
among other sanctions - NSF made a finding of research misconduct
- NSF imposed two years debarment
- Subject location unknown
16Intellectual Property Theft
- Lessons learnedÂ
- International cooperation works when the process
is explained - UK funding agency had no internal process to
pursue the violation - Investigation often relies on non-secure
communications
17 Is there a Solution?
18(No Transcript)
19The Quest for Solutions
- Professional conferences and other discussion
forums, e.g., INORMS, ORI/ESF 2007 conference in
Portugal - Research Codes of Conduct
- Education/ training
- Global Science Forum
- Project to enhance research integrity and prevent
scientific misconduct
20Global Science Forum
- The Global Science Forum brings together
science policy officials from OECD countries. The
delegates, who meet twice a year, seek to
identify and maximize opportunities for
international co-operation in basic scientific
research. - OECD http//www.oecd.org/department/
21Organization for Economic
Co-operation and DevelopmentMember Countries
- AUSTRALIA
- AUSTRIA
- BELGIUM
- CANADA
- CZECH REPUBLIC
- DENMARK
- FINLAND
- FRANCE
- GERMANY
- GREECE
- HUNGARY
- ICELAND
- IRELAND
- ITALY
- JAPAN
- KOREA
- LUXEMBOURG
- MEXICO
- NETHERLANDS
- NEW ZEALAND
- NORWAY
- POLAND
- PORTUGAL
- SLOVAK REPUBLIC
- SPAIN
- SWEDEN
- SWITZERLAND
- TURKEY
- UNITED KINGDOM
- UNITED STATES
22OECD/GSF Project To Date
- Delegation of Japan proposed the project
- Experts Group was convened to refine the project
- Delegations of Canada and Japan co-leaders
- Conducted survey to establish baseline of
information types of misconduct, mechanisms to
handle, and suspected causes - Project accepted at the GSF meeting, Helsinki,
July 2006
23OECD/GSF Project Next Steps
- Establish an International Steering Committee
- Delegations of Japan and Canada will Co-chair
- Scope of Project
- Focus on fabrication and falsification of data
and research results - Identify causes and possible remedies
- Not prescriptive directives for handling cases of
misconduct
24OECD/GSF Project Next Steps (Continued)
- Work shop
- Tokyo in early 2007
- To include multiple stakeholders, e.g., science
organizations, academia, publishers - After Workshop, develop policy report for GSF
consideration - Organize special session
- To be held in conjunction with the European
Science Foundation/Office of Research Integrity
(US) meeting - in Portugal, September 2007
25Ending considerations
- Science and science tools change faster than
either the creation of regulations or the
underlying understanding of ethical issues - Generational and cultural and community "gaps"
are real and important - Many problems may result from the "process"
- Unclear definitions
- Inconsistencies