| Literature DB >> 27995445 |
S P J M Horbach1, W Halffman2.
Abstract
Even though integrity is widely considered to be an essential aspect of research, there is an ongoing debate on what actually constitutes research integrity. The understanding of integrity ranges from the minimal, only considering falsification, fabrication and plagiarism, to the maximum, blending into science ethics. Underneath these obvious contrasts, there are more subtle differences that are not as immediately evident. The debate about integrity is usually presented as a single, universal discussion, with shared concerns for researchers, policymakers and 'the public'. In this article, we show that it is not. There are substantial differences between the language of research integrity in the scientific arena and in the public domain. Notably, scientists and policymakers adopt different approaches to research integrity. Scientists tend to present integrity as a virtue that must be kindled, while policy documents and newspapers stress norm enforcement. Rather than performing a conceptual analysis through philosophical reasoning and discussion, we aimed to clarify the discourse of 'scientific integrity' by studying its usage in written documents. To this end, large numbers of scientific publications, policy documents and newspaper articles were analysed by means of scientometric and content analysis techniques. The texts were analysed on their usage of the term 'integrity' and of frequently co-occurring terms and concepts. A comparison was made between the usage in the various media, as well as between different periods in which they were published through co-word analysis, mapping co-occurrence networks of significant terms and themes.Entities:
Keywords: Co-word analysis; Discourse; Research integrity; Scientific integrity; Scientific misconduct; Scientometrics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27995445 PMCID: PMC5705733 DOI: 10.1007/s11948-016-9858-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Eng Ethics ISSN: 1353-3452 Impact factor: 3.525
Classification of words into themes
| Theme | Examples of words |
|---|---|
| Authorship | Author, authorship, journal, paper, publication, publish |
| Education | Education, training, train, educate |
| Finance | Fund, funding, grant, finance, tax, money, cost |
| Institution | Institution, federal, community, national, government |
| Integrity | Integrity, ethical, ethic |
| Misconduct | Misconduct, plagiarism, fraud, fabrication, falsification |
| Policy | Policy, guideline, code, recommendation |
| Promote | Promote, protect, development, improve, ‘best practice’ |
| Repression | Sanction, punish, corrective, accuse, allegation |
| Science | Science, scientist, research, researcher, academic |
| Society | Society, public, environment, health, human |
| Virtue | Trust, honesty, trustworthy, responsibility, respect, faith, dignity |
Fig. 1Theme analysis on articles from 2011 to 2015 period, with standard error margins
Fig. 2Co-occurrence network of themes in abstracts of 2011–2015 scientific publications
Fig. 3Co-occurrence network of themes in full-texts of 2011–2015 policy documents
Fig. 4Co-occurrence network of themes in 2011–2015 newspaper articles
Fig. 5Co-occurrence network of ‘integrity’ in the abstracts of all scientific publications
Fig. 6Theme analyses in policy documents, geographical distribution, including standard error margins
Dimensions of differences between the concept of ‘integrity’ in various media
| Documents | Narrow versus broad | Value- versus norm-based | Aspects of research |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific publications | Broad | Value-based | Authorship |
| Methodology | |||
| Society | |||
| Older policy documents | Broad | Value-based | Society |
| Methodology | |||
| Recent policy documents | Narrow | Norm-based | Finance |
| Newspaper articles | No clear indication for either | Minor shift from value- to norm-based | Shift from society towards finance |