Global Times

Dishonest doctors

Expert call for academic assessment reform after discovery of mass fraud

- By Zhao Yusha

Experts have called for changes to China’s academic assessment system after Berlin- based publisher Springer announced on April 21 it was withdrawin­g 107 scientific articles produced by Chinese institutio­ns from editions of the Tumor Biology journal published between 2012

and 2016. “We are retracting these published papers because the peer- review process required for publicatio­n in our journals had been deliberate­ly compromise­d by fabricated peer reviewer reports,” Peter Butler, editorial director of Springer’s Cell Biology & Biochemist­ry department, told the Global Times.

The articles removed by Springer used the real names of authentic academic reviewers but fabricated their reviews, reported China Youth Daily.

According to the list Springer posted, the authors involved in this round of retraction­s are all from Chinese institutio­ns, mostly medical institutes such as the prestigiou­s Department of Neurosurge­ry, Tongji Hospital under Shanghai’s Tongji University. “Peer reviewers are required to anonymousl­y evaluate papers before researcher­s get funding, but their identities are often compromise­d and they are contacted for better evaluation reports,” Zhi Zhenfeng, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times. After domestic media reports on the retraction­s, Wang Chunhua, head of the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology, said on April 18 that Springer should also shoulder responsibi­lity for the fraud as it did not examine the articles “carefully” before publishing them. Faced with this criticism, Butler told the Global Times that “although the number of articles retracted in this case is significan­t, it reflects our diligence in investigat­ing publishing misconduct over an extended period of time. We recognize that this is an industry problem and are currently working on new procedures to avoid similar instances of misconduct in the future.”

For shame

Despite Butler claiming that academic fraud is a global phenomenon, this incident still sparked heated discussion on Chinese social media platforms as many netizens questioned Chinese academicia­ns’ integrity. “Why does this academic fraud keep happening in China, for shame,” said Sina Weibo user huoshanerq­u. In August 2016, Springer pulled 64 articles from 10 of its journals after finding evidence of faked peer reviews, nearly all of them by Chinese contributo­rs. In March 2015, London- based BioMed Central retracted 43 papers for faking peer reviews, 41 of them by Chinese researcher­s, according to an earlier Global Times report. “Academic fraud reflects society’s fraud habit. In China, many academic institutio­ns use the quantity of articles published by an academic as the standard of assessment, which causes some research fellows to only chase the quantity instead of the quality of their study results,” Hu Xingdou, a professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology, told the Global Times.

Hu noted that unlike in the West, where a person’s career can be destroyed by one fraud case, people don’t take this kind of lying seriously in China.

Hu said that to reduce academic fraud, Chinese academia should focus more on quality and make peer reviews public so that the rest of society can help supervise the process.

The China Associatio­n for Science and Technology said recently that national funding will be withdrawn from the programs involved in this latest incident, and the involved authors and institutio­ns will be barred from applying for funding, the Xinhua News Agency reported on April 27.

Structural problem

However, some doctors expressed sympathy for the fraudsters and said there are structural problems that cause such deceit.

Doctors have to publish papers to get promoted, a physician from a top Beijing hospital told the Global Times, adding that he and his peers are told by their employers to publish at least two papers in Science Citation Index ( SCI) listed journals every year.

Fraud is common because few doctors have enough time and energy to produce papers, the doctor said, adding that he regularly receives calls asking him if he needs a ghostwrite­r.

He added that many of his colleagues cannot communicat­e well in English so they find companies to improve their writing.

The Global Times reporter found out that many ghostwriti­ng firms offer a full refund if an article is not published in an SCI- listed journal.

“You just hand over your article to us and we will take care of the rest,” one firm told the Global Times.

Butler told China Youth Daily that Springer knows many Chinese authors ors seek editing help, elp, and it is possible ible that authors do notot know that these polishers lishers fabricate peer er reviews.

Regardless,ss, China’s academic reputation­eputation has been severelyel­y damaged by this incident, saidaid Hu, adding that it’s time to change how doctors are assessed to o reduce the excessive focus on publicatio­n. ation.

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