Weekend reads: The ‘plagiarism hunter’; targeting academics over grant fraud; data manipulation at the World Bank

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The week at Retraction Watch featured:

Our list of retracted or withdrawn COVID-19 papers is up to 155. And there are now 30,000 retractions in our database.

Here’s what was happening elsewhere (some of these items may be paywalled, metered access, or require free registration to read):

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4 thoughts on “Weekend reads: The ‘plagiarism hunter’; targeting academics over grant fraud; data manipulation at the World Bank”

  1. Re: “Don’t make early career researchers ‘ghost authors.’ Give us the credit we deserve”: Whether to name in the Acknowledgements vs. include as an Author can require careful judgement, but use of another’s words, thoughts, or ideas – without attribution – is plagiarism, pure and simple.

    1. The Mainichi Shinbun article presents the same odd false dilemma: “They provided support including in correcting the writing, structuring it, as well as aiding in data analysis and the creation of graphs.”

      The first two of these four named services are also provided by Editage, which is ubiquitous in Japan. I know at least some researchers list Editage in acknowledgements; I hope all of them do. There should be no shame in it, and I agree with you that it’s bad practice not to acknowledge. The Mainichi article seems to assume that there’s malpractice going on with a service like this, but it’s only malpractice if people are too scared of social consequences to openly acknowledge assistance in normal scientific fashion, which really is the the most serious and widespread problem for Japanese researchers.

    2. The “ghost authors” article does promote reflection. Indeed, I’ve observed inclusion authors on papers who have worked on a project, but who have made no substantial contribution to a particular paper, perhaps out of fear of a dispute.

      The writer of the “ghost authors” article does make the case of a contribution by generating data and figures, although that doesn’t *necessarily* imply authorship is warranted: it is possible or even common to collect data and generate figures without making a scientific contribution or even having an appreciation for the scientific question of interest.

  2. “Much-Cited Study on Ivermectin and Infertility Is Old, Less than Relevant.”

    The age and lower relevance of the paper in question is perhaps less important than its presence in a garbage journal from a predatory publisher – almost as if its claims had been made up, to fill a gap in someone’s CV.

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