Fr. 69.00

Research Ethics for Scientists - A Companion for Students

English · Paperback / Softback

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Research Ethics for Scientists
 
A fully updated textbook helping advanced students and young scientists navigate the ethical challenges that are common to scientific researchers in academia
 
As the number of scientific journals, government regulations, and institutional guidelines continue to grow, research scientists are increasingly facing ethical dilemmas. Even seasoned and honest scientists can unintentionally commit research misconduct or fail to detect and address intentional misbehavior.
 
Research Ethics for Scientists is an authoritative "how-to" guide that clearly outlines best practices in scientific research. Critically examining the key problems that arise in research management and practice, this real-world handbook helps students and young scientists conduct scientific research that adheres to the highest ethical standards. Accessible chapters, logically organized into functional themes and units, cover all the major areas that are crucial for sustained success in science: ideas, people, data, publications, and funding.
 
The second edition offers new and updated content throughout, including discussions of recent innovations to detect and adjudicate research misconduct, vulnerabilities in research practices that were exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, and new methods people are using to cheat the system and skew the peer review process. Entirely new case studies focus on harassment and bullying in training and mentorship, anti-science and pseudoscience, equality and equity issues, the fabrication of data, and more. This edition integrates gender, race, student training, and other important social issues throughout.
* Presents up-to-date coverage of growing issues such as the ethics of rushing to publish
* Discusses the use of text-similarity detecting software to reveal plagiarism and image analysis techniques for detecting data and image manipulation
* Features new material on current trends such as universal open access (OA) publishing, increased research metrics, new models for peer review, working for multiple employers, and "shadow labs" for individual scientists
* Includes access to a companion website with PowerPoint slides of case studies and figures
 
Written by an experienced researcher and PhD mentor, Research Ethics for Scientists: A Companion for Students, Second Edition is an indispensable resource for graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, early-career professors, and scientists involved in teaching scientists-in-training.

List of contents

Preface xi
 
Acknowledgments xii
 
About the Companion Website xiii
 
Chapter 1 Research Ethics: The Best Ethical Practices Produce the Best Science 1
 
Judge yourself 6
 
Morality vs. ethics 6
 
Onward and upward 8
 
Inauspicious beginnings 8
 
How science works 10
 
Nothing succeeds like success 13
 
Summary 14
 
Chapter 2 How Honest Is Science? 15
 
Judge yourself 16
 
Sanctionable research misconduct: fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism 16
 
"Scientists behaving badly" 17
 
Do scientists behave worse with experience? 20
 
Judge yourself 20
 
Crime and punishment 21
 
Judge yourself 25
 
Discussion questions 27
 
Summary 28
 
Chapter 3 Research Misconduct: Plagiarize and Perish 29
 
Ideas 31
 
Sentences 32
 
Phrases 32
 
A hoppy example 33
 
What is plagiarism, really? 34
 
Judge yourself 34
 
How many consecutive identical and uncited words constitute plagiarism? 35
 
Self- plagiarism and recycling 36
 
Judge yourself 37
 
Judge yourself 44
 
Tools to discover plagiarism 46
 
iThenticate 46
 
References cited 48
 
Self- plagiarism and ethics revisited 51
 
Judge yourself 51
 
Is plagiarism getting worse? 52
 
The [true] case study: the plagiarizing novelist who also plagiarized her confession to plagiarism and the author of the website "Plagiarism Today" 54
 
Summary 55
 
Chapter 4 Finding the Perfect Mentor 56
 
Caveat 57
 
Choosing a mentor 58
 
Judge yourself 62
 
Choosing a graduate project 69
 
Judge yourself 69
 
Mentors for assistant professors 69
 
How to train your mentor 75
 
Discussion questions 78
 
Discussion questions 80
 
Summary 81
 
Chapter 5 Becoming the Perfect Mentor 82
 
Grants and contracts are a prerequisite to productive science 84
 
Judge yourself 85
 
Publications are the fruit of research 86
 
On a personal level 87
 
Judge yourself 88
 
Common and predictable mistakes scientist make at key stages in their training and careers and how being a good mentor can make improvements 88
 
Discussion questions 104
 
Summary 105
 
Chapter 6 Research Misconduct: Fabricating Data and Falsification 106
 
Why cheat? 107
 
Judge yourself 110
 
The case of Jan Hendrik Schön, "Plastic Fantastic" 110
 
The case of Woo- Suk Hwang: dog cloner, data fabricator 111
 
The case of Diederik Stapel, psychological serial fabricator 113
 
Judge yourself 114
 
Detection of image and data misrepresentation 116
 
Judge yourself 120
 
Lessons learnt 121
 
Summary 121
 
Chapter 7 Research Misconduct: Falsification and Whistleblowing 122
 
Reporting and adjudicating research misconduct 123
 
A "can of worms" indeed: the case of Elizabeth "Betsy" Goodwin 125
 
Judge yourself 128
 
Judge yourself 129
 
Judge yourself 131
 
Judge yourself 137
 
Judge yourself 140
 
Cultivating a culture of openness, integrity, and accountability 140
 
Summary 141
 
Chapter 8 Publication Ethics of Authorship: Who Is an Author on a Scientific Paper and Why 142
 
The importance of the scientific publication 143
 
Predatory publishing 145
 
Judge yourself 146
 
Who should be listed as an author on a scientific paper? 146
 

About the author










C. Neal Stewart, Jr. is Ivan Racheff Chaired Professor of Plant Molecular Genetics, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Tennessee, USA. He teaches a graduate-level research ethics course that focuses on best practices in research that are portable among different areas of biology, medicine, and agriculture.

Summary

Research Ethics for Scientists

A fully updated textbook helping advanced students and young scientists navigate the ethical challenges that are common to scientific researchers in academia

As the number of scientific journals, government regulations, and institutional guidelines continue to grow, research scientists are increasingly facing ethical dilemmas. Even seasoned and honest scientists can unintentionally commit research misconduct or fail to detect and address intentional misbehavior.

Research Ethics for Scientists is an authoritative "how-to" guide that clearly outlines best practices in scientific research. Critically examining the key problems that arise in research management and practice, this real-world handbook helps students and young scientists conduct scientific research that adheres to the highest ethical standards. Accessible chapters, logically organized into functional themes and units, cover all the major areas that are crucial for sustained success in science: ideas, people, data, publications, and funding.

The second edition offers new and updated content throughout, including discussions of recent innovations to detect and adjudicate research misconduct, vulnerabilities in research practices that were exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, and new methods people are using to cheat the system and skew the peer review process. Entirely new case studies focus on harassment and bullying in training and mentorship, anti-science and pseudoscience, equality and equity issues, the fabrication of data, and more. This edition integrates gender, race, student training, and other important social issues throughout.
* Presents up-to-date coverage of growing issues such as the ethics of rushing to publish
* Discusses the use of text-similarity detecting software to reveal plagiarism and image analysis techniques for detecting data and image manipulation
* Features new material on current trends such as universal open access (OA) publishing, increased research metrics, new models for peer review, working for multiple employers, and "shadow labs" for individual scientists
* Includes access to a companion website with PowerPoint slides of case studies and figures

Written by an experienced researcher and PhD mentor, Research Ethics for Scientists: A Companion for Students, Second Edition is an indispensable resource for graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, early-career professors, and scientists involved in teaching scientists-in-training.

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