Wonder if this will become a big problem in the future

RichardE

Banned
Dec 31, 2005
10,246
2
0
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2006/01/28/2003290995

Prominent scientist in Japan may have fabricated findings

SICK SCIENCE: In a case mirroring Seoul's cloning scandal, Kazunari Taira is suspected of fabricating results on a potential medical breakthrough

AFP , TOKYO
Saturday, Jan 28, 2006,Page 3
A panel at one of Japan's top universities said yesterday a prominent scientist likely fabricated papers on a potential medical breakthrough, in a case mirroring South Korea's cloning scandal.

Kazunari Taira, a professor at the University of Tokyo's Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, wrote that he succeeded in producing a human enzyme inside E.coli bacteria for the first time.

The research, published in journals including Britain's prestigious Nature, could open new possibilities for treatment of diseases.

But the panel in a final report on the allegations said it could not back up Taira's findings and decided to close his laboratory. The university plans a disciplinary committee to consider further action.

The panel said that the results in Taira's papers could not be reproduced during experiments.

"Professor Taira has damaged the trust and honor of the University of Tokyo," Kimihiko Hirao, head of the department, told a news conference with the panel members.

"We cannot deny the suspicion that he fabricated them," Hirao said. "It is frustrating to allow sick science to run rampant."

Taira, 53, denied the allegations. He has earlier published a correction to the methods section of his paper in Nature.

"There were some minor mistakes in the papers, but these were not significant enough to rock the results themselves," Taira said.

The allegations mirrored South Korea's science scandal embroiling Hwang Woo-suk, who had once been a national hero for his claims of pioneering cloning.

Hwang, who had published in the US journal Science, has sunk into disgrace with a panel finding last month that his research data was fabricated.
This story has been viewed 312 times.

So we had the story last month regarding the scientists from South Korea, and than this one from this month. As someone planning on doing research abroad, this seems like it might hurt the chances of research breakthroughs being taken seriously in the future.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
4,267
126
This has always been a problem, but it's being covered more. It's one of the reasons for peer review.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
4,267
126
Originally posted by: RichardE
Would you say these were caught in the peer review?

Obviously not. That does not change the fact that peer review is one of the mechanisms used to catch this, and that's why more isn't seen. The pressure from "publish or perish" occasionally overwhelms people. Egos do too.

Robert Gallo is a scoundrel. Crick and Watson were thieves. That's the reality. Not only did these people get away with it, they are sometimes held up as heroes of science.

That's the way of things.
 

magomago

Lifer
Sep 28, 2002
10,973
14
76
I think the fact that he was shutdown immediately, told that he lost the trust and honor of the campus, and his called called "sick science" showed that the response is good and strong these days.

While I can't speak for the past, today if you try to publish a lie you will get your fifteen minutes of false fame along with a lifetime of disgrace... The scientific method really doesn't allow for fabrication of data;)
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
4,267
126
Originally posted by: CSMR
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Crick and Watson were thieves.
What did they do?

They along with Wilkins used her research to determine the structure of DNA. Fact is that they were so worried about her that they kept constant tabs on her work, and using it before it was public. Taking someone's unpublished work without their permission is theft.