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2 Scientists Are Penalized for Research Misconduct

January 3, 2012, 1:49 pm

The federal Office of Research Integrity has found that two scientists engaged in research misconduct on studies financed with grants from the National Institutes of Health. According to notices published today in the Federal Register, Mahesh Visvanathan, a research assistant professor at the University of Kansas, “intentionally and knowingly” plagiarized “large amounts of text” from three published papers and an abstract; and Jennifer Jamieson, a former graduate student at the State University of New York’s Upstate Medical University, falsified data in a grant application, an article submitted to a journal, and several presentations. The Visvanathan case appears connected with a similar finding on another Kansas researcher by the research-integrity office, known as ORI, in December. The notices state that the scientists have agreed to have their research supervised, if supported by the Public Health Service, for two or three years and to exclude themselves from serving as advisers to the service, among other things. Ms. Jamieson “neither admits nor denies ORI’s finding of scientific misconduct,” the notice says.

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  • renellin

    I find it interesting that where I work, if a student turns in work that is not their own, they face not only immediate consequences such as an F in the class, but also possible expulsion from the college. These scientists don’t pay a dime, other than excluding themselves as advisors for a limited time, and don’t even admit to wrongdoing. Is it really just too expensive to press an issue that we expect 100% compliance of in every student freshman?

  • http://twitter.com/Kenkyuufusei 論文捏造

    http://katolab-imagefraud.blogspot.com/
    Alleged image fraud by Kato lab at the University of Tokyo in JapanResearch misconduct? Fabrication? Falsification? Unintentional and inadvertent mistake? Coincidental similarity? Shigeaki Kato laboratory : Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0032, Japan.