Universities and other research institutions arguably have a bigger role to play in boosting research integrity than journals or funding bodies, according to the architect of guidelines designed to prevent bad practice from flourishing under âpublish or perishâ regimes.
Epidemiologist David Moher said that research institutions performed a vital function as âthe group that promotes and tenuresâ researchers. âThey have the interest and ability to foster research integrity and promote better research practices,â he told Times Higher Education.
âInstitutions are essential drivers for change. We have to start somewhere, and [we] think institutions are a critical stakeholder.â
Dr Moher led the team that developed guidelines on how institutions assess and reward their researchersâ efforts, dubbed the âHong Kong Principlesâ. Published in their final form in the journal , along with illustrative examples showing how to apply them, the principles have been whittled down from a draft version debated at last yearâs World Congress on Research Integrity (WCRI) in Hong Kong.
Âé¶č
The five principles spotlight factors all too often overlooked in metrics-based evaluations of researchersâ work, which tend to focus on publications, citations and research grant income. âWhile easy to measure, these criteria do not give a full picture of the rigour of researchersâ work or of their contributions to research and society,â said Dr Moher, an expert in scientific publishing at the University of Ottawa.
The guidelines highlight the need to ensure âresponsible practicesâ at all stages of research projects â including conception, design, methodology, execution and dissemination â and to transparently report all research, regardless of the results.
Âé¶č
They stress the value of open access â to methods, materials and data as well as publications â and of the various forms of research including replication, innovation, translation, synthesis and meta-research. They also emphasise the importance of peer review, mentoring, outreach and knowledge exchange.
Dr Moher acknowledged that the guidelines warranted support from funding councils and publishers as well as universities. âThese principles are aimed at institutions, [but] that doesnât mean journals or funders are being excluded,â he said. â[They] can endorse the principles, [which] would send a positive message to institutions.â
He said the reverse also applied, with institutional endorsement needed to bolster initiatives aimed at funders or publishers. He cited the , a Centre for Open Science initiative to foster data transparency standards, which had attracted âbuy-inâ from journals and funders but not yet institutions.
âNot every researcher receives funding,â he added. âThe reach of funders is often curtailed.â
Âé¶č
The Hong Kong Principles have evolved from drafts circulated to 700 WCRI participants. A later version, uploaded after the June 2019 conference, attracted input from more than 100 people.
Since then, the Covid-19 pandemic has sapped the resources available to researchers in many countries. But Dr Moher said that this highlighted the need to double down on research integrity.
He said that the pandemic had shone a light on some âvery unfortunate research practicesâ that had led to article retractions. Research findings about Covid-19 had been kept secret even though an  to share data had been signed by the Wellcome Trust and more than 150 other organisations.
âWill and commitmentâ are needed in the face of such problems, he insisted. âThe Hong Kong Principles can be endorsed and implemented across all institutions, regardless of their fiscal health.â
Âé¶č
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?









