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A Torrid Tale of Plagiarizing Paleontologists

its hard to think of writes "There's an interesting story up at Nature News about scientific ethics. It seems that while one group of scientists is figuring out details about aetosaurs (ancient crocodiles), another group in New Mexico is repeatedly taking credit for their work and naming the new animals they 'discover'. It also looks like the state government, which has been asked to intervene, is trying to sidestep the issue. 'The New Mexico cultural-affairs department, which oversees the museum, conducted a review of two of the instances last October and concluded that the allegations were groundless. But some experts call that review a whitewash, claiming that it failed to follow accepted practices of US academic institutions faced with claims of misconduct. Now all three cases are before the Ethics Education Committee of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, a professional organization based in Northbrook, Illinois, which is awaiting responses from the New Mexico team before making a ruling.' How widespread is this kind of thing?"

2 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not very by laughingskeptic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I disagree. Graduate students simply do not count for much in academia. While a graduate student at Texas A&M, Dr. Robert Coulson plagiarized a paper that my boss designed and I wrote in 1990. The last half of one of his papers was our paper with no attribution. Coulson had tenure and my boss was trying to get tenure. The University handled this by having Coulson send an errata to the publisher giving my boss a partial authorship credit. My name was not even mentioned. Total cover up. I am convinced this happens all the time.

  2. They work. People just suck. by interactive_civilian · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The "publish or perish" mentality is what pushed me away from research science as I was getting my BS (Marine Biology), and I bet it's the same mentality that causes a lot of these problems (plagiarizing, especially from the work of grad students and undergrads, occasionally, using false data, rejecting data that doesn't fit, etc). Couple that with a desire to become famous, and there you have it.

    The problem doesn't lie in the scientific method or in replication, and peer review wouldn't be a problem if people were motivated to do science for science's sake rather than greed. People are they problem. They are not using those processes, at least, not correctly. I try to teach these things in my science classes, but I worry that by trying to make good scientists (biologists in my case), I'm setting my students up to not be able to compete in the real scientific world. :(

    --
    "Empathise with stupidity, and you're halfway to thinking like an idiot." - Iain M. Banks