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Plan to Replicate 50 High-Impact Cancer Papers Shrinks to Just 18

Plan to Replicate 50 High-Impact Cancer Papers Shrinks to Just 18

An ambitious project that set out nearly 5 years ago to replicate experiments from 50 high-impact cancer biology papers, but gradually shrank that number, now expects to complete just 18 studies.

The 'Loss of Confidence Project' Offers Scientists a Place to Confess

The 'Loss of Confidence Project' Offers Scientists a Place to Confess

What are researchers to do when they lose confidence in their previously published work? A new project has an answer. Will it help the replication crisis?

Open Science and Its Role in Universities: A Roadmap for Cultural Change

Open Science and Its Role in Universities: A Roadmap for Cultural Change

LERU's paper discussing the eight pillars of Open Science identified by the European Commission: the future of scholarly publishing, FAIR data, the European Open Science Cloud, education and skills, rewards and incentives, next-generation metrics, research integrity, and citizen science.

PSI: Investigation into Violation of Research Integrity Is Concluded

PSI: Investigation into Violation of Research Integrity Is Concluded

In June 2017, PSI was made aware of allegations that members of its staff had submitted an article containing aspects of scientific misconduct to a scientific journal.  A preliminary review by experts showed that the allegations raised were solid.

Repeat Offenders: When Scientific Fraudsters Slip Through the Cracks

Repeat Offenders: When Scientific Fraudsters Slip Through the Cracks

Balancing due process with the academic community's right to know is no easy task, but critics say more could be done to weed out bad actors.  Many universities halt investigations after an accused scientist departs, leaving future employers blind to the researcher’s history of allegations.

20th Anniversary of the Andrew Wakefield Vaccine Fraud - No Celebrations

20th Anniversary of the Andrew Wakefield Vaccine Fraud - No Celebrations

A bit over 20 years ago, in February 1998, Andrew Wakefield published his infamous article in Lancet, which was eventually retracted in 2010. He stated that "onset of behavioural symptoms was associated, by the parents, with measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination in eight of the 12 children."

Our Survey Found 'Questionable Research Practices' by Ecologists and Biologists – Here's What That Means

Our Survey Found 'Questionable Research Practices' by Ecologists and Biologists – Here's What That Means

Questionable research practices are not fraud, and they're not cause for panic. But they do give us some hints about how we can make science more robust.

Using Software to Fight Cancer Research Fraud

Using Software to Fight Cancer Research Fraud

After discovering a pattern of fraudulent papers from China, an Australian oncologist aims to expand her watchdog project and keep the retractions coming.

Is Science Really Facing a Reproducibility Crisis, and Do We Need It To?

Is Science Really Facing a Reproducibility Crisis, and Do We Need It To?

Overview of recent evidence suggesting that the integrity crisis narrative is mistaken - a narrative of epochal changes and empowerment of scientists would be more accurate, inspiring, and compelling.

Are Research Papers Less Accurate and Truthful Than in the Past?

Are Research Papers Less Accurate and Truthful Than in the Past?

That's a myth, as Daniele Fanelli of the London School of Economics suggests in this week’s PNAS.

When Splashy Headlines Become the Goal of Science, the Process Suffers

When Splashy Headlines Become the Goal of Science, the Process Suffers

Internal and external pressure drive a rush toward prestige.

Scientists and Journalists Square Off Over 'Getting it Right'

Scientists and Journalists Square Off Over 'Getting it Right'

Some scientists say they should have the right to review stories in which their work or words are covered prior to publication. Journalists disagree.