Misconduct accounts for the majority of retracted scientific publications

University of Washington · Albert Einstein College of Medicine

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

A detailed review of all 2,047 biomedical and life-science research articles indexed by PubMed as retracted on May 3, 2012 revealed that only 21.3% of retractions were attributable to error. In contrast, 67.4% of retractions were attributable to misconduct, including fraud or suspected fraud (43.4%), duplicate publication (14.2%), and plagiarism (9.8%). Incomplete, uninformative or misleading retraction announcements have led to a previous underestimation of the role of fraud in the ongoing retraction epidemic. The percentage of scientific articles retracted because of fraud has increased ∼10-fold since 1975. Retractions exhibit distinctive temporal and geographic patterns that may reveal underlying causes.

Citation impact

1,211
total citations
FWCI
146.81
Percentile
100%
References
45
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Scientific misconduct
  • Misconduct
  • Research integrity
  • Contrast (vision)
  • Psychology
  • Data science
  • Medicine
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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