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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John D'AngeloPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: CRC Press Edition: 2nd edition Weight: 0.181kg ISBN: 9781138035423ISBN 10: 1138035424 Pages: 144 Publication Date: 14 December 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsScientific misconduct in research: What is it, why does it happen, and how do we identify when it happens? What constitutes scientific misconduct? Authorship and intellectual property. Bad ethics vs. bad science. New results that prove old results wrong. The whistle-blower’s dilemma. What are the penalties for scientific misconduct? Human and animal subjects. What is peer review’s role in scientific misconduct? Revisiting Vlad and Frankie. Can peer reviewers be unethical? What effect on the public does scientific misconduct have? MMR and autism. Climategate. HIV vaccine. Animal rights groups. Cold fusion. Bernard Kettlewell. Electromagnetic field and high-tension power lines. Fracking and pollution. What constitutes responsible conduct from the point+A76 of view of human and animal subjects in research? The ethics of the pharmaceutical industry. Science and the public. The role of government in scientific misconduct? The responsibility of science to the environment. Is there some research that shouldn’t be done because of threats the results may pose to society? Summary of ethics guidelines of STEM professional societies. Can Scientific misconduct be prevented? Intentional negligence in acknowledgment of previous work. Deliberate fabrication of data. Deliberate omission of known data that doesn’t agree with hypotheses. Passing another researcher’s data as one’s own. Publication of results without consent of all the researchers. Failure to acknowledge all the researchers who performed the work. Conflict-of-interest issues. Repeated publication of too-similar results. Breach of confidentiality. Misrepresenting others’ work. Wrapping up. Case Studies. Darwin and Wallace. Rangaswamy Srinivasan–VISX patent dispute. Schwartz and Mirkin. Corey and Woodward. Córdova, Scripps Research Institute, and Stockholm University. La Clair and hexacyclinol. Woodward and quinine. DNA. David Baltimore and Teresa Imanishi-Kari. John Fenn–Yale patent dispute. VIOXX®. Index.ReviewsThis book is intended for those who want to teach integrity and responsible conduct of research, with reflections on the ethics of science. The cases are an excellent basis for interactive training, as all these examples are controversial and raise challenging questions that need to be explored further. D'Angelo brings home in a forceful way the important role that scientific publications and scientific publishing can play in highlighting misconduct and bad practices, while also showing how these can be the source of bad practices as well when quality peer review or editorial evaluations are compromised. As we all know, these negative behaviors by authors and editors are often the consequence of the race to publish (. . . or perish) which too often leads to evaluation criteria for the promotion of researchers and allocation of resources that are based on quantity of publication, rather than quality. This book helps to provide a way forward by using concrete examples to signal where and how misconduct is likely to occur, and what can be done to avoid these pitfalls. - Herve Maisonneuve, Redaction Medicale et Scientifique, Translated from the original French. This book is intended for those who want to teach integrity and responsible conduct of research, with reflections on the ethics of science. The cases are an excellent basis for interactive training, as all these examples are controversial and raise challenging questions that need to be explored further. D'Angelo brings home in a forceful way the important role that scientific publications and scientific publishing can play in highlighting misconduct and bad practices, while also showing how these can be the source of bad practices as well when quality peer review or editorial evaluations are compromised. As we all know, these negative behaviors by authors and editors are often the consequence of the race to publish (. . . or perish) which too often leads to evaluation criteria for the promotion of researchers and allocation of resources that are based on quantity of publication, rather than quality. This book helps to provide a way forward by using concrete examples to signal where and how misconduct is likely to occur, and what can be done to avoid these pitfalls. - Herve Maisonneuve, Redaction Medicale et Scientifique, Translated from the original French. Author InformationStony Brook University, Bachelor of Science (BS), Chemistry, 1996 – 2000 The University of Connecticut, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Chemistry, 2000 – 2005 Postdoctoral Research Associate, Johns Hopkins University,2005 – 2007 Alfred University, NY, August 2007 – Present John D'Angelo teaches the following courses: Organic Chemistry I & II and associated labs; General Chemistry I & II labs and occasionally lectures; Basic (non majors) Organic Chemistry; How Science Changed the World (As a First Year Experience Course). He is also the current President of the Faculty Senate. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |