Before we present this week’s Weekend Reads, a question: Do you enjoy our weekly roundup? If so, we could really use your help. Would you consider a tax-deductible donation to support Weekend Reads, and our daily work? Thanks in advance.
The week at Retraction Watch featured:
- A paper that took a journal three days to accept — and more than two months to retract
- The retraction of a 2012 paper widely derided as racist
- The retraction of a paper co-authored by someone no one can find
- A retraction of a Nature paper by a Harvard group
Our list of retracted or withdrawn COVID-19 papers is up to 20.
Here’s what was happening elsewhere:
- “Scientists Take Aim at Another Coronavirus Study in a Major Journal.” The authors were allowed to choose their own reviews.
- “But peer review fails more often than anyone admits. We should be surprised it catches anything at all, the way it’s set up.”
- “How Did This Pass Peer Review? Thoughts on the Lancet and NEJM COVID-19 Retractions.”
- “Retractions are not new. These particular retractions just happened to get a lot of publicity. I am not sure if this will be a sea change…I doubt that there will be any major changes beyond a little more careful scrutiny in the immediate future.
- “Mandeep Mehra, the medical director of the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Heart and Vascular Center and a coauthor on all three Surgisphere papers, tells The Scientist in a statement that he ‘requested the ivermectin preprint to be removed from SSRN as he felt further analysis was needed to consider additional confounding factors.’”
- “The variety of systems developed within European countries and the lack of systems in some countries create a heterogeneity of responses to research misconduct, and obstacles to dealing with research misconduct in particular in international scientific collaborations.”
- “Reference lists of neuroscience articles show marked gender imbalances.”
- “Science isn’t broken, but gatekeeping journals expected to give any kind of stamp of quality are.”
- “Nearly half of the education research journals endorsed by the South African Department of Higher Education and Training should lose their accreditation, the country’s science academy has said.”
- “On average retractions take about three years. These are taking days or weeks at most.”
- During the #COVID19 pandemic, preprint servers have become “a place where the tension between speed and the importance of getting [research] right has become front and center.”
- “In The Rush to Provide Information on COVID-19, Are We Losing Faith in Scientists, Government Institutions and the Media?” A conversation with our Ivan Oransky on June 24th.
- “Is Research Ethics Committee review of most clinical trials fundamentally broken?”
- Should psychology departments abolish requirements that undergrads take part in research?
- “DRC Withdrawn from Auction After Protest.” A withdrawal for fraud from another sphere: the world of wine.
- A new paper looks at ways to standardize “fair investigations of allegations of research misconduct.”
- A look at retractions in ophthalmology.
- “Peer review should be an honest, but collegial, conversation,” says a new Nature survey.
- A paper “reveals that existing educational and research systems partly fail to foster research integrity.”
- Anxious that you haven’t yet written a paper about COVID-19? Mason Porter is here to help.
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This comment might be controversial. I always wonder about why is there always a comment about gender citation issue in science in the weekend read. I think there is much more further problem like geographical bias issue like authors from south east asia or any other country that are not represented. They always tried to publish to top tier journal but only papers with an inclusion of an international author (usually some prof. In a western countries) will be received and reviewed.
I also think that why the gender citation issue in social science and humanities papers were not touch upon?