A Duke University researcher known globally for his popular writings and stage presentations on the phenomenon of human dishonesty is confronting allegations that his work may have been built on fraud.
Dan Ariely, a professor of psychology and behavioural economics at Duke, is facing the retraction ofĀ Ā in which insurance company data on cheating in car odometer readings appears itself to have been faked.
The case was investigated by a team of three academics who specialise in probing inaccuracies in behavioural sciences andĀ Ā has painted Professor Ariely as the person most likely responsible.
If affirmed, the discovery could prompt a thorough reassessment of the Israeli-American academic known forĀ Ā and works that include aĀ Ģż³Ł¾±³Ł±ō±š»å The (Honest) Truth About DishonestyĀ and aĀ Ģż³¦²¹±ō±ō±š»å (Dis)Honesty ā The Truth About Lies.
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āMy guess is that if this is fraudulent, other things are fraudulent too,ā said one of the investigators, Joseph Simmons, a professor of operations, information and decisions at the University of Pennsylvania. āAnd if weāre going to retract all of it, those are whole literatures that are massively affected.ā
The fraud appears to have been āsurprisingly careless and incompetentā, said Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel prizewinning emeritus professor of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University who served as editor for the Ariely teamās article in theĀ Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. āThe person who fabricated the data did not expect anyone to look at them with care.ā
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Professor Kahneman is high on a list of academics stunned by the possibility. He largely created the field of behavioural economics and then advised Professor Ariely on his pathway toĀ Ģż²¹²Ō»åĢżĀ on navigating human nature.
The purpose of the Ariely teamās study inĀ PNASĀ was to test whether people obtaining a car insurance policy would be more truthful about the odometer reading on their vehicle if they signed a statement attesting to its accuracy at the top or the bottom of the form.
Those customers signing at the top were reported in the study to have admitted to 10 per cent more miles than those who signed at the bottom, which Professor Ariely and hisĀ PNASĀ co-authors described as an indication of people being pushed towards honesty by making their promise in advance.
The online investigative forum DataColada began looking at the matter after a Harvard University team tried last year to replicate the central finding, but could not, and asked theĀ PNASĀ co-authors for a copy of the underlying insurance company data.
Professor Simmons, part of the three-person DataColada team, said it was important to see what insight the insurance company can provide. One theoretical possibility, he said, is that someone at the company may have found it easier to generate random data than conduct the necessary queries of its own customers.
But the DataColada probe identified far more factors that Professor Ariely has yet to address. They include his name appearing as the creator in the Excel file that he was understood to have received from the insurance company, changes in font styles that fit with the key data alterations, public discussions of the findings by Professor Ariely years ahead of theĀ PNASĀ paperās publication, and his inability to produce his own copies of emails and data files from the time.
Professor Ariely and his four co-authors on theĀ PNASĀ paper had all responded to the investigation by issuing statements thanking DataColada for its work, with most calling for their paperās retraction. Professor Ariely, however, took sole responsibility for obtaining the data from the insurance company.
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āI did not suspect any problems with the data,ā Professor ArielyĀ said in . āI also did not test the data for irregularities, which after this painful lesson, I will start doing regularly.ā
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But the DataColada team ā which also includes Leif Nelson, a professor of business administration and marketing at the University of California at Berkeley, and Uri Simonsohn, a professor of operations, innovation and data sciences at Ramon Llull University ā made clear the data was full of characteristics showing it had been actively manipulated.
āItās fraud,ā Professor Simmons said. āWe would never use that word if it wasnāt actually that.ā
While pursuing his doctoral degree, Professor Simonsohn worked in the lab of Professor Ariely at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
āThey are very close,ā Professor Simmons said of professors Simonsohn and Ariely. āWe all really like him ā it definitely didnāt start with: āOh, letās dig into Dan Arielyās work.āā
In part, he said, the situation reflects differing expectations a decade ago when anyone committing fraud with large datasets had very low expectations that anyone would subject it to close computerised scrutiny.
In a brief response to questions fromĀ Times Higher Education, Professor Ariely cited only his teamās agreement to turn over the data file, which had been retained by another of theĀ PNASĀ co-authors, as evidence that he had nothing to hide.
The insurance company, The Hartford, declined to comment on the matter other than saying in a written response to questions that it was not involved in Dr Arielyās analysis of its data.Ā PNASĀ confirmed that it was ālooking into the matterā of a possible retraction. Duke University said it would not comment on the case, including whether it was conducting any investigation.
āI expect that Duke will follow up,ā Professor Kahneman said. āThey must be very concerned, because Ariely is one of their stars.ā
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