Lectures on research ethics
Those employed at the University can watch following lectures:
Meet science's top detective – Elisabeth Bik about reviewing scientific images
Science builds on previous science. Even after peer review and publication, scientific papers may contain problematic images or other information. If they are not corrected after publication, articles with incorrect or even falsified data can lead to one wasting other researchers' time and money when they try reproduce results. Several high-profile cases of scientific misconduct has been described, but many more cases remain undetected.
Elisabeth Bik is a "forensic image detective" who left her industry job to search for and report biomedical articles that contain inaccuracies or problematic data. She has made a systematic check of 20,000 articles in 40 journals and found that about 4% of these contained falsely duplicated images. In his talk, she will present her work and show several types of inappropriately duplicated images and other examples of research misconduct.
Who owns the data?
In this seminar a very common question is addressed; who can decide over or own research materials, data or results? We will discuss from the perspectives of ethics, intellectual property rights and administrative law, while looking at the realities facing researchers. What are the conflicts that arise from these issues?
Lectures: Joakim Philipson, Stockholm university, Monica Lassi, Lund university, Stefan Eriksson, Uppsala university, Pontus Skråmstadius, UU Innovation, Erica Schweder, Göteborg university och Leif Kirsebom, Uppsala university.
Stefan Eriksson, advisor to the Vice Chancellor on good research, Uppsala university.
Monica Lassi, IT-architect and Coordinator of the Management of research data, Lund university.
Pontus Skråmstadius, IP advisor, UU Innovation.
Joakim Philipson, Research data Analyst/Curator, Stockholm university.
Erica Schweder, legal advisor, Göteborg university.
More lectures on research ethics