学术机构研究诚信调查报告的质量。

IF 7.2 Q1 ETHICS Research integrity and peer review Pub Date : 2019-02-19 DOI:10.1186/s41073-019-0062-x
Andrew Grey, Mark Bolland, Greg Gamble, Alison Avenell
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引用次数: 17

摘要

背景:学术机构在保护和维护研究诚信方面发挥着重要作用。有人对可能损害研究完整性的机构调查的客观性、充分性和透明度表示关切。我们评估了三家学术机构向我们提供的关于大量重叠研究的调查报告,这些研究可能会损害完整性。方法:2017年,我们向四家学术机构提出了对> 由一组重叠的研究人员共同撰写的200份出版物。每个机构都启动了一项调查。截至2018年11月,已有三人向我们报告了他们的调查结果,但只有一份报告是公开的。两名研究人员使用已公布的26项检查表独立评估了每份可用报告,该检查表旨在确定研究完整性机构调查的质量和充分性。每位评估员记录了额外的意见。结果:向各机构提出的关切是重叠的、广泛的,包括一般性的和针对具体出版物的关切。个别机构可能受到影响的出版物数量从34份到200份不等。提供报告的三个机构的调查持续时间为8-17 月。这些调查分别覆盖了14%、15%和77%的潜在受影响出版物。使用质量检查表的评估员之间的一致性分别为0.68、0.72和0.65。只有4/78个单项检查表项目得到了充分处理:另有14个项目无法评估。每一份报告都被评为总体不足。报告未能解决出版物特有的问题,更侧重于确定研究不当行为,而不是评估出版物的完整性。结论:我们的分析发现了机构调查的质量和报告方面的重要缺陷,这些机构调查对重叠的研究人员报告的大量研究的完整性表示担忧。它们加剧了人们对机构是否有能力严格客观地监督其员工进行的研究的完整性的担忧。
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Quality of reports of investigations of research integrity by academic institutions.

Background: Academic institutions play important roles in protecting and preserving research integrity. Concerns have been expressed about the objectivity, adequacy and transparency of institutional investigations of potentially compromised research integrity. We assessed the reports provided to us of investigations by three academic institutions of a large body of overlapping research with potentially compromised integrity.

Methods: In 2017, we raised concerns with four academic institutions about the integrity of > 200 publications co-authored by an overlapping set of researchers. Each institution initiated an investigation. By November 2018, three had reported to us the results of their investigations, but only one report was publicly available. Two investigators independently assessed each available report using a published 26-item checklist designed to determine the quality and adequacy of institutional investigations of research integrity. Each assessor recorded additional comments ad hoc.

Results: Concerns raised with the institutions were overlapping, wide-ranging and included those which were both general and publication-specific. The number of potentially affected publications at individual institutions ranged from 34 to 200. The duration of investigation by the three institutions which provided reports was 8-17 months. These investigations covered 14%, 15% and 77%, respectively, of potentially affected publications. Between-assessor agreement using the quality checklist was 0.68, 0.72 and 0.65 for each report. Only 4/78 individual checklist items were addressed adequately: a further 14 could not be assessed. Each report was graded inadequate overall. Reports failed to address publication-specific concerns and focussed more strongly on determining research misconduct than evaluating the integrity of publications.

Conclusions: Our analyses identify important deficiencies in the quality and reporting of institutional investigation of concerns about the integrity of a large body of research reported by an overlapping set of researchers. They reinforce disquiet about the ability of institutions to rigorously and objectively oversee integrity of research conducted by their own employees.

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