| Literature DB >> 19478950 |
Abstract
The frequency with which scientists fabricate and falsify data, or commit other forms of scientific misconduct is a matter of controversy. Many surveys have asked scientists directly whether they have committed or know of a colleague who committed research misconduct, but their results appeared difficult to compare and synthesize. This is the first meta-analysis of these surveys. To standardize outcomes, the number of respondents who recalled at least one incident of misconduct was calculated for each question, and the analysis was limited to behaviours that distort scientific knowledge: fabrication, falsification, "cooking" of data, etc... Survey questions on plagiarism and other forms of professional misconduct were excluded. The final sample consisted of 21 surveys that were included in the systematic review, and 18 in the meta-analysis. A pooled weighted average of 1.97% (N = 7, 95%CI: 0.86-4.45) of scientists admitted to have fabricated, falsified or modified data or results at least once--a serious form of misconduct by any standard--and up to 33.7% admitted other questionable research practices. In surveys asking about the behaviour of colleagues, admission rates were 14.12% (N = 12, 95% CI: 9.91-19.72) for falsification, and up to 72% for other questionable research practices. Meta-regression showed that self reports surveys, surveys using the words "falsification" or "fabrication", and mailed surveys yielded lower percentages of misconduct. When these factors were controlled for, misconduct was reported more frequently by medical/pharmacological researchers than others. Considering that these surveys ask sensitive questions and have other limitations, it appears likely that this is a conservative estimate of the true prevalence of scientific misconduct.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19478950 PMCID: PMC2685008 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Study selection flow diagram.
Characteristics of studies included in the review.
| ID | Date Country | Sample | Method | N (%) | Self-/Non self- | Quality |
| Tangney, 1987 | n.s US | Researchers in a “highly ranked American university”. | Distributed within department | 245 (22) | n | 1 |
| Lock, 1988 | 1988 UK | Professors of medicine or surgery, other academics, doctors, research managers, editors of medical journals non-randomly contacted by the author | Mailed+pre-paid return | 79 (98.7) | n | 0 |
| Simmons, 1991 | 1989 US | Active members of the Society of University Surgeons | n.s. | 202 (82) | n | 0 |
| Kalichman, 1992 | 1990 US | Research trainees in the clinical and basic biomedical sciences at the University of California, San Diego | Distributed through the department | 549 (27) | s+n | 1 |
| Swazey, 1993 | 1990 US | Doctoral students and faculty, from 99 of the largest graduate departments in chemistry, civil engineering, microbiology and sociology | Mailed+prepaid return+postcard to confirm response | 2620 (65.5) | n | 1 |
| Glick, 1993 | 1992 US | Biotechnology companies' executives known by the author | Administered orally, on the phone | 15 | n | 0 |
| Greenberg, 1994 | 1991 US | Members of the Society for Risk Analysis, Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, American Industrial Hygiene Association | Mailed | 478 (32) | n | 1 |
| Glick, 1994 | 1993 US | Attendees at the Third Conference on Research Policies and Quality Assurance | Handed out, personally returned by respondents on the same | 36 (34) | n | 1 |
| Eastwood, 1996 | 1993 US | All postdoctoral fellows registered with the Office of Research Affairs of the University of California, San Francisco | Mailed+follow-up letter | 324 (32.8) | s+n | 1 |
| Bebeau, 1996 | 1995 US | Program chairs and officers of the American Association for Dental Research | Mailed+prepaid return+postcard to confirm response | 76 (78) | n | 1 |
| Rankin, 1997 | 1995 US | Research coordinators or directors of master's and doctoral nursing programs | Mailed | 88 (43) | n | 1 |
| May, 1998 | 1997 UK | Randomly selected authors of papers published in the past 3 years on addiction-related subjects | Mailed | 36 (51) | n | 1 |
| Ranstam, 2000 | 1998 Various | Members of the International Society of Clinical Biostatistics | Mailed+online electronic version | 163 (37) | n | 1 |
| List, 2001 | 1998 US | Participants to the January 1998 meetings of the American Economic Association | Hand-delivered, Direct Response+Random Response method, drop box for returning responses | 94 (23.5) | s | 1 |
| Geggie, 2001 | 2000 UK | Medical consultants appointed between Jan 1995 and Jan 2000 working in 7 hospital trusts in the Mersey region | Mailed+pre-paid return | 194 (63.6) | s+n | 1 |
| Meyer, 2004 | n.s US | Members of editorial boards of American Accounting Association journals, and participants at the 1998, 1999, and 2000 American Accounting Association New Faculty Consortia | Email asking to reply if unwilling to participate, mailed+pre-paid return | 176 (48.5) | n | 1 |
| Martinson, 2005 | 2002 US | Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health | Mailed, pre-paid return, 2$ | 3247 (47.2) | s | 1 |
| Henry, 2005 | 2002 Australia | Medical specialists, from the 2002 edition of the Medical directory of Australia, involved in pharmaceutical industry-sponsored research | Mailed | 338 | s | 1 |
| Gardner, 2005 | 2002 Various | Authors of pharmaceutical clinical trials published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, equally selected between first, middle and last author. | Mailed+10$ check+second survey to non-respondents+follow-up call or email | 322 (64) | s+n | 1 |
| Kattenbraker 2007 | 2005 US | Health education professors at every rank, teaching at 94 institution of higher education | Email+web-based survey+follow up email+final reminder | 153 (25.8) | n | 1 |
| Titus, 2008 | 2005 US | Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health, one per department | Pre-notification+mailed+reminder postcard+additional survey packet+follow-up letter | 2212 (52) | n | 1 |
Abbreviations: “Date” is the year when the survey was actually conducted, “N” is the number of respondents who returned the questionnaire, “%” is the response rate of the survey.
Number of respondents who ad engaged in industry-sponsored research in the previous 12 months, out of a total sample of 2253, with 39% response rate.
Figure 2Forrest plot of admission rates of data fabrication, falsification and alteration in self reports.
Area of squares represents sample size, horizontal lines are 95% confidence interval, diamond and vertical dotted line show the pooled weighted estimate.
Figure 3Admission rates of Questionable Research Practices (QRP) in self- and non-self-reports.
N indicates the number of survey questions. Boxplots show median and interquartiles.
Figure 4Forrest plot of admission rates of data fabrication, falsification and alteration in non-self reports.
Area of squares represents sample size, horizontal lines are 95% confidence interval, diamond and vertical dotted line show the pooled weighted estimate.
Actions taken against misconduct.
| ID | N cases | Action taken | % |
| Tangney, 1987 | 78 | Took some action to verify their suspicions of fraud or to remedy the situation | 46 |
| Rankin, 1997 | 31 [ffp] | In alleged cases of scientific misconduct a disciplinary action was taken by the dean | 32.4 |
| Some authority was involved in a disciplinary action | 20.5 | ||
| Ranstam, 2000 | 49 | I interfered to prevent it from happening | 28.6 |
| I reported it to a relevant person or organization | 22.4 | ||
| Kattenbraker, 2007 | 33 | Confronted individual | 55.5 |
| Reported to supervisor | 36.4 | ||
| Reported to Institutional Review Board | 12.1 | ||
| Discussed with colleagues | 36.4 | ||
| Titus, 2008 | 115 [ffp] | The suspected misconduct was reported by the survey respondent | 24.4 |
| The suspected misconduct was reported by someone else | 33.3 |
Abbreviations: “N cases” is the total number of cases of misconduct observed by respondents, [ffp] indicates that the number includes cases of plagiarism, “%” is the percentage of cases that had the specified action taken against them. All responses are mutually exclusive except in Kattenbraker 2007.
Inverse variance-weighted regression on admission rates.
| Variable | B±SE | P | Stand. Coeff. | Model R2 | |
| Base Model | Constant | −4.53±0.81 | <0.0001 | 0 | 0.82 |
| Self-/Non-self | −3.02±0.38 | <0.0001 | −1.04 | ||
| Mailed/Handed | −1.17±0.4 | 0.0032 | −0.33 | ||
| “Fabricated, Falsified”/“Modified” | −1.02±0.39 | 0.0086 | −0.34 | ||
| Candidate co-variables | Year | −0.03±0.03 | 0.3 | −0.14 | 0.83 |
| USA/other | −0.71±0.4 | 0.08 | −0.2 | 0.85 | |
| Researcher/other | −0.33±0.33 | 0.32 | −0.11 | 0.83 | |
| Biomedical/other | 0.17±0.39 | 0.66 | 0.06 | 0.82 | |
| Medical/other | 0.85±0.28 | 0.0022 | 0.29 | 0.89 | |
| Social Sc./other | −0.03±0.37 | 0.94 | −0.01 | 0.82 |
The table shows model parameters of an initial model including three methodological factors (top four rows) and the parameter values for each sample characteristic, entered one at a time in the basic model. All variables are binary. Regression slopes measure the change in admission rates when respondents fall in the first category.
Figure 5Sensitivity analysis of admission rates of data fabrication, falsification and alteration in self reports.
Plots show the weighted pooled estimate and 95% confidence interval obtained when the corresponding study was left out of the analysis.
Figure 6Sensitivity analysis of admission rates of data fabrication, falsification and alteration in non-self reports.
Plots show the weighted pooled estimate obtained when the corresponding study was left out of the analysis.