Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action

Several online forums exist to facilitate open and/or anonymous discussion of the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Data integrity is a common discussion topic, and it is widely assumed that publicity surrounding such matters will accelerate correction of the scientific record. This study aimed t...

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Main Author: Paul S. Brookes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/313.pdf
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author Paul S. Brookes
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author_sort Paul S. Brookes
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description Several online forums exist to facilitate open and/or anonymous discussion of the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Data integrity is a common discussion topic, and it is widely assumed that publicity surrounding such matters will accelerate correction of the scientific record. This study aimed to test this assumption by examining a collection of 497 papers for which data integrity had been questioned either in public or in private. As such, the papers were divided into two sub-sets: a public set of 274 papers discussed online, and the remainder a private set of 223 papers not publicized. The sources of alleged data problems, as well as criteria for defining problem data, and communication of problems to journals and appropriate institutions, were similar between the sets. The number of laboratory groups represented in each set was also similar (75 in public, 62 in private), as was the number of problem papers per laboratory group (3.65 in public, 3.54 in private). Over a study period of 18 months, public papers were retracted 6.5-fold more, and corrected 7.7-fold more, than those in the private set. Parsing the results by laboratory group, 28 laboratory groups in the public set had papers which received corrective action, versus 6 laboratory groups in the private set. For those laboratory groups in the public set with corrected/retracted papers, the fraction of their papers acted on was 62% of those initially flagged, whereas in the private set this fraction was 27%. Such clustering of actions suggests a pattern in which correction/retraction of one paper from a group correlates with more corrections/retractions from the same group, with this pattern being stronger in the public set. It is therefore concluded that online discussion enhances levels of corrective action in the scientific literature. Nevertheless, anecdotal discussion reveals substantial room for improvement in handling of such matters.
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spelling doaj.art-d9d3df72ddf548cea3df1b3254c31de92023-12-03T10:16:33ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-04-012e31310.7717/peerj.313313Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective actionPaul S. Brookes0Department of Anesthesiology, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USA, *, *The author wishes to emphasize that the data collection for this research was conducted outside the boundaries of his position as a University of Rochester faculty member. The author assumes full responsibility for this work, and his affiliation with the University of Rochester does not represent an endorsement of this work by the institution.Several online forums exist to facilitate open and/or anonymous discussion of the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Data integrity is a common discussion topic, and it is widely assumed that publicity surrounding such matters will accelerate correction of the scientific record. This study aimed to test this assumption by examining a collection of 497 papers for which data integrity had been questioned either in public or in private. As such, the papers were divided into two sub-sets: a public set of 274 papers discussed online, and the remainder a private set of 223 papers not publicized. The sources of alleged data problems, as well as criteria for defining problem data, and communication of problems to journals and appropriate institutions, were similar between the sets. The number of laboratory groups represented in each set was also similar (75 in public, 62 in private), as was the number of problem papers per laboratory group (3.65 in public, 3.54 in private). Over a study period of 18 months, public papers were retracted 6.5-fold more, and corrected 7.7-fold more, than those in the private set. Parsing the results by laboratory group, 28 laboratory groups in the public set had papers which received corrective action, versus 6 laboratory groups in the private set. For those laboratory groups in the public set with corrected/retracted papers, the fraction of their papers acted on was 62% of those initially flagged, whereas in the private set this fraction was 27%. Such clustering of actions suggests a pattern in which correction/retraction of one paper from a group correlates with more corrections/retractions from the same group, with this pattern being stronger in the public set. It is therefore concluded that online discussion enhances levels of corrective action in the scientific literature. Nevertheless, anecdotal discussion reveals substantial room for improvement in handling of such matters.https://peerj.com/articles/313.pdfRetractionCorrectionErratumImage manipulationSocial mediaScience publishing
spellingShingle Paul S. Brookes
Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
PeerJ
Retraction
Correction
Erratum
Image manipulation
Social media
Science publishing
title Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
title_full Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
title_fullStr Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
title_full_unstemmed Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
title_short Internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
title_sort internet publicity of data problems in the bioscience literature correlates with enhanced corrective action
topic Retraction
Correction
Erratum
Image manipulation
Social media
Science publishing
url https://peerj.com/articles/313.pdf
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