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Deception should have no place in the scientific ecosystem.
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By
Independent Researcher
Deception is natural. All animals do it as a survival strategy; prey to avoid predators and predators to catch prey. Intraspecies deception, however, occurs mainly in the most intelligent species, for example among , and, of course, . Studies on the subject have found a direct relationship between of members of the same species or 鈥榯actical deception鈥 . In these cases, the most frequent goal is no longer mere survival, but status enhancement within the group. And since this is a trait closely linked to intelligence, it is not surprising that among humans it has become an inherent trait. In every culture for as long as there has been record, humans have deceived each other for a wide variety of benefits, and as our technological evolution and social structures have become more complex, our deceptions have become more sophisticated.
Scientists, as human beings, are not free from these behaviors, even though they are considered by the academic community as ethically, and sometimes legally, reprehensible acts. Cheating has always accompanied scientific activity, but in recent times it has spread notably in one particular area of this particular social ecosystem: scientific publications. Driven by the need to present a CV with as many published papers and articles as possible, many scientists resort to buying papers written by others and then submitting them to journals under their own name. This peculiar form of deception has grown to such an extent that there are now 鈥渃ompanies鈥 鈥攌nown in this underworld as 鈥減aper mills鈥濃 that sell scientific articles whose content is of very low quality or outright false. It is the old economic law of supply and demand; if there is a demand in the market, you can be sure that someone will satisfy it.
It is difficult to know for sure how many fake trials are published annually 鈥攖he journal Nature estimates that , which would be around 1.5% of the total鈥 but what is known is that, in a field where rigor and veracity are values that stand above all others, the damage they cause in terms of credibility is considerable. And after from numerous agents involved in the world of scientific publishing, it finally seems that a small (for the moment) group of publishers and research organizations 鈥攊ncluding Elsevier, European Research Council, National Research and Innovation Agency, Springer Nature, Royal Society of Chemistry or Taylor & Francis, for example鈥 have decided to join forces to put an end to this problem or, at least, to prevent it from continuing to grow until it is too late. This joint initiative has taken the form of a working group called and in its declaration of intent they set out a plan of five immediate actions: in the field of education and awareness-raising of all actors involved, in the improvement of the post-publication correction system, in the direct investigation of paper mills, in the development of new tools to verify the identity of the authors of papers submitted for publication and in the maintenance of a sustained debate on this problem over time.
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United2Act thus joins groups such as the , which aims to maintain trust and a high level of integrity among its partners, which comprise up to 66% of all scientific publications worldwide. These are well-intentioned initiatives, but ultimately depend on the willingness to correctly apply the protocols that all publications have in place to prevent fraud. We should not forget that the double-blind peer review system, which , was established precisely to prevent cases like these.
And yet, by the mid-1990s, the Sokal Scandal 鈥攚ith its claiming that quantum gravity was a social construct鈥 and revealed that such protocols are of little use if their application is negligent or outright biased. In these cases, and despite the fact that the scandals mainly affected publications in the social sciences and humanities, it became clear that the peer review system is not infallible if those who apply it do not do their job properly. The direct consequence of these fake papers is that the serious and rigorous research work carried out by the vast majority of the scientific community is undermined by the public鈥檚 mistrust of the entire collective. Deception may be a natural behavior, but in human society in general, and in the scientific ecosystem in particular, it should have no place.
Originally by , 03.26.2024, under the terms of a license.