Ways in Which Scientific Integrity Policies Can Be Violated
Type of Violation |
Description |
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Research Misconduct |
In proposing, performing, or reviewing research or in reporting research results: -
Fabrication: Making up data or results and recording or reporting them. -
Falsification: Manipulating research materials, equipment or processes, or changing or omitting data or results such that the research is not accurately represented in the research record. -
Plagiarism: Appropriation of another person’s ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit.
|
Flawed Scientific Practice | -
Use of improper or inappropriate methods or processes in conducting research. -
Lack of adherence to practices for research quality, such as laboratory facility accreditation, quality assurance systems, and methods validation.
|
Flawed Review | -
Undue influence or inadequate technical or peer review, including errors introduced within the review or clearance process, limiting scope of a review or peer review charge. -
Untenable timelines for review that result in flawed or incomplete reviews. -
Changing membership or structure of Federal Advisory Committees in ways that compromise their independence or eliminate needed expertise. -
Failing to respond to reviewers’ comments and/or selecting specific reviewers to influence the outcome of a review. -
Denying scientists the opportunity to review descriptions of their scientific work included in other documentation, e.g., decision documents, policy reports.
|
Undermining the Scientific Workforce | -
Selection or appointment of scientific staff based on non-science qualifications (e.g., to influence science in order to affect a particular policy outcome, reduce the overall quality of research findings, or diminish the public view and understanding of the science). -
Undermining the expertise of Federal scientists by re-assignment to other duties or denying career advancement.
|
Suppression, Delay, or Censorship | -
Preventing or delaying the release of a scientific product without scientific justification. -
Failure to allow the inclusion of research, analysis, or technological information that well-established practices would consider necessary for decision-making.
|
Mischaracterization of Science | |
Manipulation of Science | |
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