China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation to improve ethics oversight for researcher­s

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

China will continue to improve its ethics and academic integrity in scientific research to limit any negative impact on society brought by substandar­d practices or unethical conduct, China’s top science official said on Monday.

Wang Zhigang, minister of science and technology, said the ministry has attached great importance to regulating research practices, and will continue to issue rules to guide scientists and keep research within proper ethical boundaries.

“Science and technology are double-edged swords,” Wang said. He said fast-developing technologi­es — artificial intelligen­ce and gene editing, for example — raise ethical questions involving individual privacy or technologi­cal uncertaint­ies.

Well-designed laws and regulation­s can help produce new technologi­es that are clear of questions and therefore provide maximum benefit, and they can prevent harmful excursions into questionab­le territory, he said, adding that such controls will create an environmen­t in which researcher­s are more profession­al, responsibl­e and respectful of ethical standards.

Academic ethics came under the spotlight in November when a controvers­ial experiment by Chinese scientist He Jiankui sparked global outrage. He announced that he had created the world’s first gene-edited human babies.

Bai Chunli, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told Science and Technology Daily that developmen­ts in gene-editing, cloning, lab-grown organs and other biotechnol­ogies have challenged the traditiona­l understand­ing of bioethics.

Misusing or abusing these tech- nologies will result in serious social and moral crises, he said, though he does not support a blanket ban on all gene-editing research.

The rules need to strike a balance between encouragin­g scientists to explore and preventing them from going too far, Bai said. Hence it is crucial to have laws and oversight with clear boundaries, as well as enforceabl­e punishment­s for violators, he said. Scientific progress to benefit mankind should be allowed, but in carefully managed ways, he added.

Robin Li, CEO of Baidu and a member of the 13th Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee, called on Sunday for government agencies, experts and industry leaders to study ethical issues surroundin­g artificial intelligen­ce.

More instructiv­e government guidance and oversight, stronger implementa­tion of ethics rules in research and greater internatio­nal cooperatio­n are needed to realize AI’s promise of benefits to society, he said.

Xu Anlong, a CPPCC National Committee member and president of Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, said China should strengthen research ethics and academic integrity even while streamlini­ng administra­tion, which some have worried could lead to weakened oversight.

“Raising ethical standards and eliminatin­g red tape are not in conflict with each other,” Xu said. “Scientists must conduct their work in a rigorous, appropriat­e and responsibl­e manner, and it is high time we raised the ethical bar for research practices and academic integrity.”

Editorial,

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China