“…Unfortunately, it is highly doubtful whether most such institutions in India, or in other resource constrained countries, have established processes or mechanisms, or the will, to deal with issues pertaining to breaches of research integrity. The situation becomes more complex when the accused is also part of the management, or the head, as in the case of Singh, of a private institution.- Many of the risk factors that set the stage for scientific misconduct to occur are systemic (Altman and Melcher, 1983[2]; Dingell, 1993[6]; Horton, 2005[15]; Bonetta, 2006[3]; Smith, 2006[34]; White, 2005[40]; Marcovitch, 2007[23]; Kumar 2010[17]; Godlee et al ., 2011[11]; Marcovitch, 2011[24]) and include:
- The unrealistic societal and academic expectations from the results of scientific research, leading to research environments with emphasis on quantity rather than quality and integrity, and a competitive rather than collaborative ethos; and unrealistic pressures to publish for academic advancement, securing competitive research grants, and fulfilling funding or institutional performance requirements.
- The dislike by scientists and journals for negative results, and findings that contradict established beliefs and expectations; and a bias in favor of novel findings and new products, instead of the “truth”.
- Inadequate attention to meticulous documentation and quality assurance, and a propensity on the part of supervisors and reviewers to be vigilant about errors and bias but less often about deception and falsification, or fabrication. There is also lax or nonexistent supervision of young researchers, especially where supervisors are negligent or over-committed.
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