Academics accused of聽sexual聽misconduct experience a significant decrease in research citations but the same effect is not seen for scholars facing charges of scientific fraud, new analysis suggests.
In a study published in聽聽researchers tracked the citation records of 30 scholars who had faced either sexual or scientific misconduct allegations 鈥 15 of each 鈥 with each researcher compared聽with five scholars of similar standing, experience and publication history in their discipline.
According to the study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego, those accused of聽sexual聽misconduct received a 鈥渟ignificant citation penalty鈥 within three years, both in absolute terms and compared聽with similar scholars facing no accusations.
贬辞飞别惫别谤,听scholars accused of scientific misconduct聽did not incur a significant citation penalty in absolute terms nor compared聽with similar researchers with no accusations.
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That trend contradicts the results of a survey of 240 academics undertaken by the study, published on 5 March, which indicated scholars felt they are聽than from scholars accused of scientific misconduct.
Academics might 鈥渕ispredict鈥 their citing behaviour or be reluctant to disclose their true preferences, despite attesting their commitment to citations based solely on scientific merit, the study suggests.
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The citation patterns might point to the enduring legacy of 鈥減owerful social movements like #MeToo [which] amplified awareness of聽sexual聽misconduct across industries, including academia鈥, said lead author Giulia Maimone, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, who conducted the research while a graduate student at San Diego鈥檚 Rady School of Management.
鈥淲e saw some consumers boycotting the music of accused recording artists and realised that while in some contexts it might make sense to penalise the work of individuals accused of immoral behaviour, in others, such as science, the issue is not as straightforward.鈥
Addressing sexual misconduct in higher education, part one: prevention
The paper shone a light into researchers鈥 declared behaviour and their actual actions, said Maimone.
鈥淭raditionally, researchers cite a publication for its scientific relevance, not for its authors鈥 behaviour regarding non-scientific matters. If scholars used citations purely for their scientific purpose, allegations of聽sexual聽misconduct should not impact the accused鈥檚 citation rates because these allegations are unrelated to the research鈥檚 scientific merit,鈥 she said.
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鈥淩esearchers may have attempted to distance themselves from individuals accused of reprehensible behaviours 鈥 whether consciously or not 鈥 or to punish colleagues for their immoral behaviour.鈥
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