2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-020-03463-z
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Flagging incorrect nucleotide sequence reagents in biomedical papers: To what extent does the leading publication format impede automatic error detection?

Abstract: In an idealised vision of science the scientific literature is error-free. Errors reported during peer review are supposed to be corrected prior to publication, as further research establishes new knowledge based on the body of literature. It happens, however, that errors pass through peer review, and a minority of cases errata and retractions follow. Automated screening software can be applied to detect errors in manuscripts and publications. The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we designed the e… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The 100 flagged C + G articles were published between 2008 and 2019 across 48 journals ( Table 1 ) and referred to a median of 2 (range 0–4) human genes across their titles ( ). The 100 flagged C + G articles examined 13 human cancer types, where most (96/100, 96%) examined a single cancer type, typically pancreatic (35/100, 35%) or lung (22/100, 22%) cancer ), reflecting the clinical use of cisplatin and gemcitabine ( 27 , 28 ). Most (90/100, 90%) C + G articles were published by authors from China, where most (82/90, 91%) were also affiliated with hospitals ( Table 1 and ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The 100 flagged C + G articles were published between 2008 and 2019 across 48 journals ( Table 1 ) and referred to a median of 2 (range 0–4) human genes across their titles ( ). The 100 flagged C + G articles examined 13 human cancer types, where most (96/100, 96%) examined a single cancer type, typically pancreatic (35/100, 35%) or lung (22/100, 22%) cancer ), reflecting the clinical use of cisplatin and gemcitabine ( 27 , 28 ). Most (90/100, 90%) C + G articles were published by authors from China, where most (82/90, 91%) were also affiliated with hospitals ( Table 1 and ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although there have been previous reports of wrongly identified PCR primers and gene knockdown reagents in single articles or small cohorts ( 11 , 12 , 13 , 14 , 15 , 16 , 17 , 18 , 19 , 20 21 ), the present study is the first to systematically fact-check the identities of nucleotide sequences in more than 3,400 research articles. Our supported application of S&B ( 12 , 27 ) ( https://www.protocols.io/view/seek-amp-blastn-standard-operating-procedure-bjhpkj5n ) to screen three targeted corpora and two journals identified 712 articles published across 78 journals that described more than 1,500 wrongly identified sequences. These problematic articles have received >17,000 citations, including citations by human clinical trials, where approximately one quarter of problematic articles could misinform the future development of human therapies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Our subsequent notifications of these and other papers with incorrect non-targeting controls mean that journal responses are more likely to concern papers with this error type. Thirdly, subsequent analyses suggest that incorrect non-targeting reagents represent a robustly detected error type (Labbé et al 2020), as such reagents have "gained" a gene targeting function that is unambiguous and therefore easy to detect (Fig. 1b, c).…”
Section: Incorrect Non-targeting Nucleotide Sequence Reagentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Issues pertaining to image data reporting are highly represented in retractions (Bik et al, 2016), and have received significant attention (Abbott, 2019;Bik et al, 2016, as have straightforwardly plagiarized text Foltýnek et al, 2019) and statistically impossible or improbable data (Carlisle, 2012(Carlisle, , 2017Pandit, 2012). Factors such as data availability (Dafoe, 2014) and publication file formats (Labbé et al, 2020) also impact the ease of detection. By contrast, another well-known problem, misidentified cell lines, is described as widespread, but rarely results in retractions Horbach & Halffman, 2017;.…”
Section: Grand Total 60mentioning
confidence: 99%