• Re: 'The situation has become appalling': fake liberal scientific paper

    From remailer@domain.invalid@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 7 15:17:19 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, or.politics, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.education

    In <uq0b0u$1gg87$1@dont-email.me> A fool Big Trump Failure <bigtrumpfailurex@protonmail.com> wrote:

    Tens of thousands of bogus research papers are being published in
    journals in an international scandal that is worsening every year,
    scientists have warned. Medical research is being compromised, drug
    development hindered and promising academic research jeopardised
    thanks to a global wave of sham science that is sweeping
    laboratories and universities.

    Last year the annual number of papers retracted by research journals
    topped 10,000 for the first time. Most analysts believe the figure
    is only the tip of an iceberg of scientific fraud.

    “The situation has become appalling,” said Professor Dorothy Bishop
    of Oxford University. “The level of publishing of fraudulent papers
    is creating serious problems for science. In many fields it is
    becoming difficult to build up a cumulative approach to a subject,
    because we lack a solid foundation of trustworthy findings. And it’s
    getting worse and worse.”

    The startling rise in the publication of sham science papers has its
    roots in China, where young doctors and scientists seeking promotion
    were required to have published scientific papers. Shadow
    organisations – known as “paper mills” – began to supply fabricated work for publication in journals there.

    The practice has since spread to India, Iran, Russia, former Soviet
    Union states and eastern Europe, with paper mills supplying ­
    fabricated studies to more and more journals as increasing numbers
    of young ­scientists try to boost their careers by claiming false
    research experience. In some cases, journal editors have been bribed
    to accept articles, while paper mills have managed to establish
    their own agents as guest editors who then allow reams of ­falsified
    work to be published.

    “Editors are not fulfilling their roles properly, and peer reviewers
    are not doing their jobs. And some are being paid large sums of
    money,” said Professor Alison Avenell of Aberdeen University. “It is
    deeply worrying.”

    The products of paper mills often look like regular articles but are
    based on templates in which names of genes or diseases are slotted
    in at random among fictitious tables and figures. Worryingly, these
    articles can then get incorporated into large databases used by
    those working on drug discovery.

    Others are more bizarre and include research unrelated to a
    journal’s field, making it clear that no peer review has taken place
    in relation to that article. An example is a paper on Marxist
    ideology that appeared in the journal Computational and Mathematical
    Methods in Medicine. Others are distinctive because of the strange
    language they use, including references to “bosom peril” rather than
    breast cancer and “Parkinson’s ailment” rather Parkinson’s disease.

    Watchdog groups – such as Retraction Watch – have tracked the
    problem and have noted retractions by journals that were forced to
    act on occasions when fabrications were uncovered. One study, by
    Nature, revealed that in 2013 there were just over 1,000
    retractions. In 2022, the figure topped 4,000 before jumping to more
    than 10,000 last year.

    Of this last total, more than 8,000 retracted papers had been
    published in journals owned by Hindawi, a subsidiary of the
    publisher Wiley, figures that have now forced the company to act.
    “We will be sunsetting the Hindawi brand and have begun to fully
    integrate the 200-plus Hindawi journals into Wiley’s ­portfolio,” a
    Wiley spokesperson told the Observer.

    The spokesperson added that Wiley had now identified hundreds of
    fraudsters present in its portfolio of journals, as well as those
    who had held guest editorial roles. “We have removed them from our
    systems and will continue to take a proactive … approach in our
    efforts to clean up the scholarly record, strengthen our integrity
    processes and contribute to cross-industry solutions.”

    But Wiley insisted it could not tackle the crisis on its own, a
    message echoed by other publishers, which say they are under siege
    from paper mills. Academics remain cautious, however. The problem is
    that in many countries, academics are paid according to the number
    of papers they have published.

    “If you have growing numbers of researchers who are being strongly incentivised to publish just for the sake of publishing, while we
    have a growing number of journals making money from publishing the
    resulting articles, you have a perfect storm,” said Professor Marcus
    Munafo of Bristol University. “That is exactly what we have now.”

    The harm done by publishing poor or fabricated research is
    demonstrated by the anti-parasite drug ivermectin. Early laboratory
    studies indicated it could be used to treat Covid-19 and it was
    hailed as a miracle drug. However, it was later found these studies
    showed clear evidence of fraud, and medical authorities have refused
    to back it as a treatment for Covid.


    Wilkinson added that he and his colleagues were trying to develop
    protocols that researchers could apply to reveal the authenticity of
    studies that they might include in their own work. “Some great
    science came out during the pandemic, but there was an ocean of
    rubbish research too. We need ways to pinpoint poor data right from
    the start.”

    The danger posed by the rise of the paper mill and fraudulent
    research papers was also stressed by Professor Malcolm MacLeod of
    Edinburgh University. “If, as a scientist, I want to check all the
    papers about a particular drug that might target cancers or stroke
    cases, it is very hard for me to avoid those that are fabricated.
    Scientific knowledge is being polluted by made-up material. We are
    facing a crisis.”


    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024/feb/03/the-situation-has- become-appalling-fake-scientific-papers-push-research-credibility- to-crisis-point

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