Here are some of the links:
- “Duke University would have avoided embarrassment, a misconduct investigation and a lawsuit, had its top administrators paid closer attention to a thoughtful report by a medical student who saw problems in the lab of the disgraced scientist Anil Potti,” The Cancer Letter reports.
- An Epistemology of Scientific Crackpottery: “He violated the 1st commandment of science: When nature speaks, listen.”
- Journals must do more to stop authors from using “tricks of the trade” to increase their chances of being published, urge two researchers at Lund University.
- “[T]he review and editing of scholarly papers is a critical element of academics’ work and should be recognized as such by their institutions and funding bodies,” argue a number of journal editors in Australia, Alice Meadows writes.
- Romanian scientists are angry that prime minister Victor Ponta — who renounced his PhD in December following charges of plagiarism — issued an “emergency” governmental decree that “allows people to relinquish their doctoral degrees through the ministry of education, without an explanation,”Nature reports.
- “Telling The Story Behind The Retraction:” A Q&A Ivan did with Wiley in which he describes his favorite Retraction Watch merchandise.
- “Researchers are working to automate the arduous task of identifying—and amending—mislabeled sequences in genetic databases,” The Scientist reports.
- A day in the life of an academic, as portrayed by cats.
- “Elsevier Launches Open Access Journal That Will Publish Sound Research Across All Disciplines.”
- Pulse International (Pakistan) has a report from the Second International Conference on Publication Ethics in Shiraz, Iran.
- The one chart you need to understand any health study, from Vox.
- Robin Bisson describes the Genetic Expert News Services (GENes), which “aims to help reporters cover genetics.”
- In other news that could help journalists do a better job, Health News Review is back after a hiatus, thanks to funding from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.
- “One of Science’s Most Famous Quotes Is False,” says Michael Specter, with an alley-oop from Carl Zimmer.
- “[I]f much-honored faculty are copying without attribution, it’s harder to motivate instructors at these universities to insist that their hard-pressed students write everything in their own words,” writes Andrew Gelman.
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