Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Preface xi

Acknowledgments xii

About the Companion Website xiii

Chapter 1 Research Ethics: The Best Ethical Practices Produce the Best Science 1

Judge yourself 6

Morality vs. ethics 6

Onward and upward 8

Inauspicious beginnings 8

How science works 10

Nothing succeeds like success 13

Summary 14

Chapter 2 How Honest Is Science? 15

Judge yourself 16

Sanctionable research misconduct: fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism 16

“Scientists behaving badly” 17

Do scientists behave worse with experience? 20

Judge yourself 20

Crime and punishment 21

Judge yourself 25

Discussion questions 27

Summary 28

Chapter 3 Research Misconduct: Plagiarize and Perish 29

Ideas 31

Sentences 32

Phrases 32

A hoppy example 33

What is plagiarism, really? 34

Judge yourself 34

How many consecutive identical and uncited words constitute plagiarism? 35

Self- plagiarism and recycling 36

Judge yourself 37

Judge yourself 44

Tools to discover plagiarism 46

iThenticate 46

References cited 48

Self- plagiarism and ethics revisited 51

Judge yourself 51

Is plagiarism getting worse? 52

The [true] case study: the plagiarizing novelist who also plagiarized her confession to plagiarism and the author of the website “Plagiarism Today” 54

Summary 55

Chapter 4 Finding the Perfect Mentor 56

Caveat 57

Choosing a mentor 58

Judge yourself 62

Choosing a graduate project 69

Judge yourself 69

Mentors for assistant professors 69

How to train your mentor 75

Discussion questions 78

Discussion questions 80

Summary 81

Chapter 5 Becoming the Perfect Mentor 82

Grants and contracts are a prerequisite to productive science 84

Judge yourself 85

Publications are the fruit of research 86

On a personal level 87

Judge yourself 88

Common and predictable mistakes scientist make at key stages in their training and careers and how being a good mentor can make improvements 88

Discussion questions 104

Summary 105

Chapter 6 Research Misconduct: Fabricating Data and Falsification 106

Why cheat? 107

Judge yourself 110

The case of Jan Hendrik Schön, “Plastic Fantastic” 110

The case of Woo- Suk Hwang: dog cloner, data fabricator 111

The case of Diederik Stapel, psychological serial fabricator 113

Judge yourself 114

Detection of image and data misrepresentation 116

Judge yourself 120

Lessons learnt 121

Summary 121

Chapter 7 Research Misconduct: Falsification and Whistleblowing 122

Reporting and adjudicating research misconduct 123

A “can of worms” indeed: the case of Elizabeth “Betsy” Goodwin 125

Judge yourself 128

Judge yourself 129

Judge yourself 131

Judge yourself 137

Judge yourself 140

Cultivating a culture of openness, integrity, and accountability 140

Summary 141

Chapter 8 Publication Ethics of Authorship: Who Is an Author on a Scientific Paper and Why 142

The importance of the scientific publication 143

Predatory publishing 145

Judge yourself 146

Who should be listed as an author on a scientific paper? 146

Judge yourself 150

How to avoid authorship quandaries and disputes 151

Authorship for works other than research papers 153

The difference between authorship on scientific papers and inventorship on patents 154

Other thoughts on authorship and publications 155

Judge yourself 157

Summary 162

Chapter 9 Grant Proposals: Ethics and Success Intertwined 163

Why funding is crucial 164

Judge yourself 168

Path to success in funding 168

Fair play and collaboration 170

Judge yourself 171

Judge yourself 173

Recordkeeping and fiscal responsibility 173

Pushing the limits on proposals 174

Summary 179

Chapter 10 Peer Review and the Ethics of Privileged Information 180

The history of peer review 181

The nature of journals and the purpose of peer review 182

Open- access journals vs. subscription journals 182

Which papers to review? 188

Open reviews and discussion 189

Judge yourself 190

Grant proposals 190

Confidentiality and privileged information 191

Reviewers 192

Judge yourself 192

Final thoughts 193

Summary 195

Chapter 11 Data and Data Management: The Ethics of Data 196

Stewardship of data 197

Judge yourself 199

Judge yourself 204

Judge yourself 208

The land of in- between: ethics of data presented at professional meetings 208

Judge yourself 213

Raw data, processed data, and data analysis: ways to go right and wrong 213

Summary 213

Discussion questions 215

Discussion questions 216

Chapter 12 Conflicts of Interest 217

The dynamic landscape of conflicts of interest 218

Potential conflicts of interest for university scientists 219

Judge yourself 226

Conflicts of interest within labs or universities 226

Judge yourself 228

Discussion questions 232

Discussion questions 237

Summary 238

Chapter 13 What Kind of Research Science World Do We Want? 239

A culture of discipline and an ethic of entrepreneurship 241

Judge yourself 243

Too much pressure? 243

Integrity awareness through ethics education 246

Accountability 246

Truth will win 247

We scientists 248

Summary 249

References 250

Index 256

Research Ethics for Scientists

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by C. Neal Stewart

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    View other formats and editions of Research Ethics for Scientists by C. Neal Stewart

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 03/08/2023
    ISBN13: 9781119837886, 978-1119837886
    ISBN10: 111983788X

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Table of Contents

    Preface xi

    Acknowledgments xii

    About the Companion Website xiii

    Chapter 1 Research Ethics: The Best Ethical Practices Produce the Best Science 1

    Judge yourself 6

    Morality vs. ethics 6

    Onward and upward 8

    Inauspicious beginnings 8

    How science works 10

    Nothing succeeds like success 13

    Summary 14

    Chapter 2 How Honest Is Science? 15

    Judge yourself 16

    Sanctionable research misconduct: fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism 16

    “Scientists behaving badly” 17

    Do scientists behave worse with experience? 20

    Judge yourself 20

    Crime and punishment 21

    Judge yourself 25

    Discussion questions 27

    Summary 28

    Chapter 3 Research Misconduct: Plagiarize and Perish 29

    Ideas 31

    Sentences 32

    Phrases 32

    A hoppy example 33

    What is plagiarism, really? 34

    Judge yourself 34

    How many consecutive identical and uncited words constitute plagiarism? 35

    Self- plagiarism and recycling 36

    Judge yourself 37

    Judge yourself 44

    Tools to discover plagiarism 46

    iThenticate 46

    References cited 48

    Self- plagiarism and ethics revisited 51

    Judge yourself 51

    Is plagiarism getting worse? 52

    The [true] case study: the plagiarizing novelist who also plagiarized her confession to plagiarism and the author of the website “Plagiarism Today” 54

    Summary 55

    Chapter 4 Finding the Perfect Mentor 56

    Caveat 57

    Choosing a mentor 58

    Judge yourself 62

    Choosing a graduate project 69

    Judge yourself 69

    Mentors for assistant professors 69

    How to train your mentor 75

    Discussion questions 78

    Discussion questions 80

    Summary 81

    Chapter 5 Becoming the Perfect Mentor 82

    Grants and contracts are a prerequisite to productive science 84

    Judge yourself 85

    Publications are the fruit of research 86

    On a personal level 87

    Judge yourself 88

    Common and predictable mistakes scientist make at key stages in their training and careers and how being a good mentor can make improvements 88

    Discussion questions 104

    Summary 105

    Chapter 6 Research Misconduct: Fabricating Data and Falsification 106

    Why cheat? 107

    Judge yourself 110

    The case of Jan Hendrik Schön, “Plastic Fantastic” 110

    The case of Woo- Suk Hwang: dog cloner, data fabricator 111

    The case of Diederik Stapel, psychological serial fabricator 113

    Judge yourself 114

    Detection of image and data misrepresentation 116

    Judge yourself 120

    Lessons learnt 121

    Summary 121

    Chapter 7 Research Misconduct: Falsification and Whistleblowing 122

    Reporting and adjudicating research misconduct 123

    A “can of worms” indeed: the case of Elizabeth “Betsy” Goodwin 125

    Judge yourself 128

    Judge yourself 129

    Judge yourself 131

    Judge yourself 137

    Judge yourself 140

    Cultivating a culture of openness, integrity, and accountability 140

    Summary 141

    Chapter 8 Publication Ethics of Authorship: Who Is an Author on a Scientific Paper and Why 142

    The importance of the scientific publication 143

    Predatory publishing 145

    Judge yourself 146

    Who should be listed as an author on a scientific paper? 146

    Judge yourself 150

    How to avoid authorship quandaries and disputes 151

    Authorship for works other than research papers 153

    The difference between authorship on scientific papers and inventorship on patents 154

    Other thoughts on authorship and publications 155

    Judge yourself 157

    Summary 162

    Chapter 9 Grant Proposals: Ethics and Success Intertwined 163

    Why funding is crucial 164

    Judge yourself 168

    Path to success in funding 168

    Fair play and collaboration 170

    Judge yourself 171

    Judge yourself 173

    Recordkeeping and fiscal responsibility 173

    Pushing the limits on proposals 174

    Summary 179

    Chapter 10 Peer Review and the Ethics of Privileged Information 180

    The history of peer review 181

    The nature of journals and the purpose of peer review 182

    Open- access journals vs. subscription journals 182

    Which papers to review? 188

    Open reviews and discussion 189

    Judge yourself 190

    Grant proposals 190

    Confidentiality and privileged information 191

    Reviewers 192

    Judge yourself 192

    Final thoughts 193

    Summary 195

    Chapter 11 Data and Data Management: The Ethics of Data 196

    Stewardship of data 197

    Judge yourself 199

    Judge yourself 204

    Judge yourself 208

    The land of in- between: ethics of data presented at professional meetings 208

    Judge yourself 213

    Raw data, processed data, and data analysis: ways to go right and wrong 213

    Summary 213

    Discussion questions 215

    Discussion questions 216

    Chapter 12 Conflicts of Interest 217

    The dynamic landscape of conflicts of interest 218

    Potential conflicts of interest for university scientists 219

    Judge yourself 226

    Conflicts of interest within labs or universities 226

    Judge yourself 228

    Discussion questions 232

    Discussion questions 237

    Summary 238

    Chapter 13 What Kind of Research Science World Do We Want? 239

    A culture of discipline and an ethic of entrepreneurship 241

    Judge yourself 243

    Too much pressure? 243

    Integrity awareness through ethics education 246

    Accountability 246

    Truth will win 247

    We scientists 248

    Summary 249

    References 250

    Index 256

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