Back to Search Start Over

Scientific integrity issues in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry: Improving research reproducibility, credibility, and transparency

Authors :
Tamar H Schlekat
David B. Mayfield
Tim Verslycke
Richard P. Scroggins
Mike J. McLaughlin
A. P. LeHuray
John P. Sumpter
Lorraine Maltby
Timothy J. Canfield
William L. Goodfellow
Patrick D. Guiney
Lisa S. Ortego
Anne Fairbrother
Thomas P. Augspurger
Christopher A. Mebane
Source :
Integr Environ Assess Manag
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

High-profile reports of detrimental scientific practices leading to retractions in the scientific literature contribute to lack of trust in scientific experts. Although the bulk of these have been in the literature of other disciplines, environmental toxicology and chemistry are not free from problems. While we believe that egregious misconduct such as fraud, fabrication of data, or plagiarism is rare, scientific integrity is much broader than the absence of misconduct. We are more concerned with more commonly encountered and nuanced issues such as poor reliability and bias. We review a range of topics including conflicts of interests, competing interests, some particularly challenging situations, reproducibility, bias, and other attributes of ecotoxicological studies that enhance or detract from scientific credibility. Our vision of scientific integrity encourages a self-correcting culture that promotes scientific rigor, relevant reproducible research, transparency in competing interests, methods and results, and education. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2019;00:000-000. © 2019 SETAC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15513777
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Integr Environ Assess Manag
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23cb5f37b6ec367825ec5cd610b5ee5c