Sept. 11, 2007
VCU on research team receiving NIH grant to shed light on standards of scientific conduct
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Virginia Commonwealth University is part of a research team that
received a National Institutes of Health grant to explore common
practices of scientists when conducting research, their views of ideal
standards and how they may vary among different research disciplines.
The
lead institution in the study is the University of California, San
Diego. Both VCU and the University of Pennsylvania will play major
collaborative roles in the work. Investigators at Vanderbilt, Northern
Illinois University and California State University will also be
involved in the research. The grant totals nearly $479,000.
The
findings will help improve the curriculum taught to university
researchers and students about the standards of responsible conduct in
research.
“This research will provide a foundation for
understanding the views of responsible conduct in research on a broad
scale. This will help us assess teaching effectiveness and suggest
strategies to improve responsible conduct in research education and
training,” said co-investigator, Francis Macrina, Ph.D., VCU’s vice president for research.
To gather data, Macrina, together with co-investigator David Urban, Ph.D., a marketing professor in the VCU School of Business,
will poll active research scientists about standards in data
management, collaboration and authorship through focus group
discussions, interviews and a survey. Additionally, the variation of
standards within research disciplines and differences between
disciplines will be identified.
Currently, there is little
empirical research that has addressed the common practices of
scientists with regard to responsible conduct in research, or RCR.
In
1989, government officials mandated that ethics of science research be
taught in U.S. universities to ensure that scientists have a foundation
for making decisions in situations that present ethical dilemmas. When
a mandate went into effect requiring anyone supported by a predoctoral
or postdoctoral training grant to take RCR programs, Macrina was
already teaching it.
Macrina had been conducting seminars at VCU
since the mid-1980s on research “manners and methods” and turned the
series into a course, “Scientific Integrity,” which made its curriculum
debut at VCU in 1991. He then combined all the material he had gathered
to teach the developing course and turned it into one of the most
widely used textbooks in the country, Scientific Integrity, now in its
third edition.
Common areas where ethical dilemmas might arise
include conflict of interest, responsible authorship, the use of human
and animal test subjects and data management.
The principal investigator on the project is Michael Kalichman, Ph.D., of the University of California, San Diego.
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