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Erosion of scientific integrity fueled by quantitative evaluation metrics

Johannes Gierschner (IMDEA Nanociencia)
Tuesday, 18 June 2024 12:00

Place: conference room, IMDEA Nanociencia.

Abstract:

In the last few years, the scientific community has been increasingly concerned by malpractice behavior, which does not fit the classic description of 'scientific misconduct' (summarized as 'falsification, fabrication, plagiarism' - FFP[1]). Nevertheless, these practice appear to be not less threatening to the community as they come as a steady erosion, now evolving into a landside. This concerns in particular 'CV polishing' by 'citation gaming' through excessive 'guest'- & 'hyper'-authorships and 'citation cartels',[2] actually assaulting the business model of data suppliers. In fact, staggering 20% of the researchers were removed in the past three years from Clarivate's 'highly cited researcher' (HCR) list due to violation of scientific integrity.[3] The reason for this sharp increase in malpractice can be directly related to metrics-based quantitative evaluation,[4] concerning both institutions and individual researchers. In fact, this follows perfectly - and frighteningly - Goodhart's law, which, applied to the current context, may read as 'all metrics of scientific evaluation are bound to be abused'.

The seminar puts 'citation gaming' into the limelight, showing that malpractice behavior depends on whether the individual researcher stands on the top or the bottom of the scientific food chain. While researchers at the bottom are obliged to pimp up their CV by becoming prey to paper mills and predatory journals & conferences (all at public cost), as well as by excessive self-citation and creating national citation cartels,[2] researchers at the top may follow more sophisticated measures, blessed by the 'Matthew effect'.[6] This includes 'honorary' or 'guest' authorships, elaborated international 'citation cartels', and well paid lucrative ancillary revenues like 'gift affiliations' in Saudi Arabia, editor positions in predatory journals or decoy organizer & plenary speaker of predatory conferences.[2] Equally, for all researchers, metrics-driven working & thinking fuels scientific hypes with short-term impact and leads to a tsunami in often worthless 'salami papers' of questionable content, which nobody is able to digest anymore. We advocate for an end of scientific hyper-proliferation by returning to 'quality over quantity', based on the principles of modesty, integrity & autonomy. Only in doing so, science is able to keep its incorruptible voice in times of deep threats to our free societies.

[1] see e.g. (a) DFG Guidelines for Safeguarding Good Research Practice; (b) European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity; (c) J. Mehlich, Good Chemistry: Methodological, Ethical, and Social Dimensions, RSC Publishing 2021
[2] for further reading on relevant aspects, see link collection at www.uv.es/jogiers/ethics.html
[3] see e.g. the analysis in El País.
[4] see e.g. (a) Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA); (b) Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment (COARA); (c) J. Z. Muller, The Tyranny of Metrics, Princeton University Press 2018.
[5] M. Biagioli, Watch out for cheats in citation game, Nature 2016, 535, 201.
[6] see e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_effect