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Scholar Results 1 - 10 of about 44 citing Sox: Research misconduct, retraction, and cleansing the medical literature: lessons from.... (0.09 sec) 

Fraud: causes and culprits as perceived by science and the media. Institutional changes, …


M Franzen, S Rödder, P Weingart - EMBO reports, 2007 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
In the aftermath of this case, many scientists expressed concerns that the
public image of science, and of stem-cell research in particular, had been
tarnished. “Scientists fear that the episode will damage not only public ...
Cited by 10 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions

What is the future of peer review? Why is there fraud in science? Is plagiarism out of control? …


CR Triggle, DJ Triggle - Vascular Health and Risk Management, 2007 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
What is the future of peer review? Why is there fraud in science? Is plagiarism
out of control? Why do scientists do bad things? Is it all a case of:“All that
is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing?”
Cited by 6 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions

Ética de las publicaciones en revistas médicas


H Reyes, J Palma, M Andresen - Rev Méd Chile, 2007 - SciELO Chile
Authors of clinical articles have similar motivations and rules than authors in
other scientific fields. In addition, medical research must obey specific
ethical rules that apply to studies involving human subjects, including ...
Cited by 17 - Related articles - Cached - All 4 versions

Ghosts in the Machine: Publication Planning in the Medical Sciences


S Sismondo - Social Studies of Science, 2009 - sss.sagepub.com
ABSTRACT Publication of pharmaceutical company-sponsored research in medical
journals, and its presentation at conferences and meetings, is mostly governed
by 'publication plans' that extract the maximum amount of scientific and ...
Cited by 5 - Related articles - All 3 versions

[PDF] Preventing and processing research misconduct: a new Australian code for responsible …


MB Van Der Weyden - Medical journal of Australia, 2006 - mja.com.au
The six lessons from the Hall affair6 • Allegations of serious scientific
misconduct should be dealt with from the start by an external and independent
inquiry. • The inquiry should have statutory power to investigate and ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 4 versions

Dishonesty in medicine revisited


HL Fred - Texas Heart Institute Journal, 2008 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
A further element in this medical mess is dishonesty—an embarrassment that
pervades our profession and undermines its core values of truth, integrity,
philanthropy, and altruism. Without question, dishonesty comes in all ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 7 versions

[PDF] Peer-review-verfahren zur Qualitätssicherung von Open-access-zeitschriften: …


UT Müller, 2008 - edoc.hu-berlin.de
2.1.3 Anforderungen an das wissenschaftliche Publizieren........................
............................................ 10 2.1.4 Bedeutung der
Qualitätssicherung ........................................................ ...
Cited by 5 - Related articles - View as HTML - Library Search - All 3 versions

Honesty and good faith: Two cornerstones in the ethics of biomedical publications


H Reyes B - Revista médica de Chile, 2007 - scielo.sld.cu
Cited by 4 - Related articles - Cached - BL Direct - All 2 versions

Falsified papers in high-impact journals were slow to retract and indistinguishable from …


NA Trikalinos, E Evangelou, JPA Ioannidis - Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2008 - Elsevier
Fourteen eligible journals had 63 eligible retracted articles. Median time from
publication to retraction was 28 months; it was 79 months for articles where a
senior researcher was implicated in the misconduct vs. 22 months when ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 11 versions

Research integrity: collaboration and research needed


E von Elm - The Lancet, 2007 - Elsevier
Who likes to clean up the backyard if not absolutely needed? Most
vice-chancellors of research, when asked about scientific misconduct, pretend
this is a rare occurrence and not a problem in their university. Only when ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 12 versions


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