August 17, 2023

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New call for joint effort to bolster research integrity

Credit: Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics (2023). DOI: 10.3389/frma.2023.1134082
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Credit: Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics (2023). DOI: 10.3389/frma.2023.1134082

Who's responsible for upholding research integrity, mitigating misinformation or disinformation and increasing trust in research? Everyone, even those reporting on research, says a new article published by leading research integrity experts.

In their paper published in the journal Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics, Dr. Leslie McIntosh (Vice President Research Integrity, Digital Science) and Ms Cynthia Hudson Vitale (Director, Science Policy and Scholarship, Association of Research Libraries) call for improved policies and worldwide coordination between funding bodies, publishers, , scholarly societies, and the media.

"Scientific reputation requires a coordinated approach across all stakeholders," they write.

"The burden of improving scientific integrity most naturally falls on those individuals conducting research; yet their work does not occur in a vacuum… the responsibility of upholding, fostering, and maintaining scientific integrity should rest on all stakeholders producing and consuming scientific information."

Dr. McIntosh says this sentiment is echoed by Dr. Holden Thorp's recent comments in Science in his editorial titled "Generative Approach to Research Integrity.

In their article, Dr. McIntosh and Ms Hudson Vitale say, "Systematic change comes when all players in the ecosystem work toward a common goal. Organizational stakeholders must coordinate efforts to fortify science integrity: making science better, and better science easier."

They say a global shift in culture will lead to advances in research integrity. To do this, responsibility must be shared, with "changes needed at the macro level in the scientific ecosystem."

"The current 'culture' of science may be collaborative at the research level, yet is often disparate at the ecosystem level… disparate stakeholders and processes across the research integrity ecosystem need to increase coordination and communication," they write.

Dr. McIntosh and Ms Hudson Vitale have produced a table that summarizes the roles to be played and the changes required of each of the key stakeholder groups. This includes:

More information: Leslie D. McIntosh et al, Coordinating culture change across the research landscape, Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics (2023). DOI: 10.3389/frma.2023.1134082

H. Holden Thorp, Generative approach to research integrity, Science (2023). DOI: 10.1126/science.adk1852

Journal information: Science

Provided by Digital Science

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