Science Integrity Digest, August 2024

Your monthly digest of science integrity news.

General Science Integrity News

Sleuthing

Legal threats for science critics

Federal and institutional investigations

Publishers taking action

Games

Artificial intelligence and science

New Publication and Editorials

Retraction Watch’s Weekend Reads:

Science Integrity Digest, June 2024

A round-up from last month, with news articles about science integrity, retractions of several highly cited papers in the fields of Alzheimer’s disease and stem cell research, generative AI and misconduct, and another retraction for Didier Raoult.

General Science Integrity News

Highly cited Alzheimer’s paper retracted by Nature

  • Daily briefing: Landmark Alzheimer’s paper will be retracted. Senior author plans to retract her team’s highly cited study on the cause of Alzheimer’s disease after acknowledging that the paper contains manipulated images. Plus, why cicadas shriek so loudly and how CO2 helps viruses stay alive in the air. – Flora Graham – Nature Briefing
  • Alzheimer’s study pulled over data tampering. American university researchers insist their main findings still stand in dementia paper that had been cited 2,500 times. It is the most-cited paper ever to be retracted, according to Retraction Watch, a group that flags dubious research and regularly finds signs of evidence tampering. – Rhys Blakely – The Times UK
  • After Amyloid. Authors of a landmark Alzheimer’s disease research paper published in Nature in 2006 have agreed to retract the study in response to allegations of image manipulation. University of Minnesota (UMN) Twin Cities neuroscientist Karen Ashe, the paper’s senior author, acknowledged in a post on the journal discussion site PubPeer that the paper contains doctored images. – Mike Barr – POZ
  • Do we have Alzheimer’s disease all wrong?
    Retracted studies and new treatments reveal the confusing state of Alzheimer’s research. The authors of the retracted paper in question, which was published in Nature in 2006 and claimed to identify a specific target for future drug development, agreed to withdraw their research in full, two years after a stunning investigation by Science found that key images had been doctored.
    Dylan Scott – Vox
  • Alzheimer : les dessous de la fraude scientifique derrière l’une des études les plus influentes. Il y a deux ans, un chercheur jusqu’ici inconnu formulait des accusations de fraude contre l’un des articles scientifiques les plus importants au monde. Il vient d’obtenir gain de cause. Antoine Beau – L’Express [In French]
  • Retraction, 26 June 2024: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07691-8

Even higher cited stem cell paper retracted by Nature

About 17 years after New Scientist investigators Eugenie Reich and Peter Aldhous revealed problems in a Nature 2002 paper about making adult stem cells pluripotent (see 2007 articles in New Scientist and New York Times and this recent X thread here), and more than four years after I found additional problems in that paper (PubPeer), Nature decided to retract it. Meanwhile, it has been cited nearly 4,500 times.

Other notable misconduct findings

Another retraction for Didier Raoult

The International Journal of Obesity retracted an article on which Didier Raoult was the corresponding and last author, “because the authors could not confirm approval from an appropriate ethics committee to recruit healthy donors to provide samples for use in this research.”According to the Retraction Watch Database, this is his 13th retraction. The paper had been flagged on PubPeer because it was one of five papers with the same local approval number, while it appeared to not have CPP approval (regional IRB-like approval needed in France for human subjects research). Read more about the problems in Raoult’s papers here, here, and here.

Artificial intelligence and science misconduct

A (now-retracted) paper featuring an AI-generated rat with a giant penis has caused a lot of laughs on social media. But AI is capable of making much more believable images. Is the scientific publishing world ready for a tsunami of fake photos and dataset? And how can we use AI tools to actually detect fraud? Also see below in the new publication list.

Science Integrity around the world

Interviews with science sleuths

New publications and editorials

Retraction Watch’s Weekend Reads:

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