October 2024

In the News

Fallout zone: After misconduct occurs in a lab, the bystanders are left to grapple with the scientific and personal consequences.


A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.


Science is built on trust. What happens when someone destroys it?


October 4, 2024

The Transmitter

Calli McMurray


"Daniel Heinz clicked through each folder in the file drive, searching for the answers that had evaded him and his lab mates for years.


Heinz, a graduate student in Brenda Bloodgood’s lab at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), was working on a Ph.D. project, part of which built on the work of a postdoctoral researcher who had left the lab and started his own a few years prior. The former postdoc studied how various types of electrical activity in the mouse hippocampus induce a gene called NPAS4 in different ways. One of his discoveries was that, in some situations, NPAS4 was induced in the far-reaching dendrites of neurons.


The postdoc’s work resulted in a paper in Cell, landed him more than $1.4 million in grants and an assistant professor position at the University of Utah, and spawned several follow-up projects in the lab. In other words, it was a slam dunk.


But no one else in the lab—including Heinz—could replicate the NPAS4 data. Other lab members always had a technical explanation for why the replication experiments failed, so for years the problem was passed from one trainee to another."

Read more...

AI Detectors Falsely Accuse Students of Cheating - With Big Consequences


About two-thirds of teachers report regularly using tools for detecting AI-generated content. At that scale, even tiny error rates can add up quickly.


October 18, 2024

Bloomberg

Jackie Davalos and Leon Yin


"After taking some time off from college early in the pandemic to start a family, Moira Olmsted was eager to return to school. For months, she juggled a full-time job and a toddler to save up for a self-paced program that allowed her to learn remotely. Seven months pregnant with her second child, Olmsted enrolled in online courses at Central Methodist University in 2023, studying to become a teacher.


Just weeks into the fall semester, Olmsted submitted a written assignment in a required class—one of three reading summaries she had to do each week. Soon after, she received her grade: zero. When she approached her professor, Olmsted said she was told that an AI detection tool had determined her work was likely generated by artificial intelligence. In fact, the teacher said, her writing had been flagged at least once before.


For Olmsted, now 24, the accusation was a “punch in the gut.” It was also a threat to her standing at the university. “It’s just kind of like, oh my gosh, this is what works for us right now—and it could be taken away for something I didn’t do,” she says."





Read more...
More Research Misconduct News...
U.S. Department Health and Human Services (HHS)
The Office of Research Integrity (ORI)
Research Misconduct Case Summaries
Visit the HHS ORI website

NEW! RCR In-Person Trainers by College Webpage

RCR In-Person training/discussion certificates are starting to expire in November! We now have a new webpage to help individuals find trainers in their college to provide an RCR In-Person training/discussion session. [HTML]


If your department is not listed and you would like to volunteer to be an RCR In-Person trainer for that department, please contact RCR@uky.edu. We are providing train-the-trainer sessions now.

RCR Compliance for the In-Person Training/Discussion Component by College

RCR In-Person Training Certificates will start to expire in November

As of October 28, 2024, we have 92% compliance with the In-Person Training/Discussion component across all colleges.


It's time to get ready for RCR In-Person Training/Discussion refreshers!


*Reminder: RCR training is biennial for both components. If you have completed the online Basic stage, the online Refresher stage must be completed every two years by your certificate expiration date to stay in compliance. The in-person training is a separate component and does not count as the refresher stage.

RCR In-Person Training

As of January 1, 2024, individuals added to an initial research protocol must have both components of the RCR training completed before the protocol is submitted to the IRB or approved by IACUC.


To find available session dates, please go to the RCR In-Person Training page. Sessions will be added as they become available.


*RCR training is biennial. In-Person training must be completed every two years. This training is in addition to the online RCR course.

iThenticate (plagiarism-checking software)

iThenticate (plagiarism-checking software) is now available for RCR-compliant researchers and graduate students.


Click the button below to request your account today!

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Need a safe and secure place to store your research data? Need to collaborate with your colleagues easily and efficiently?


LabArchives isn't just for labs and it's free to all UK researchers!    



Click the button below to learn more about LabArchives today!

UK ERN

Interested in being an RCR trainer?


ORI is recruiting volunteers to aid with leading RCR training sessions within their department.


Request to be a trainer by clicking the button below.

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RCR Team
Watch this short video to learn more about RCR and why it is important!
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Emily Matuszak
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