Good scientific conduct
All research carried out at DTU must be of high quality and reliability. A part of conducting reliable research of high quality is compliance with the principles for good scientific practice. These principles are understood partly through a description of unwanted behaviours, defined as either scientific misconduct or questionable research practice, and partly through guidelines for what behaviours are wanted in connection with e.g. publishing research results and attribution of authorship. In 2015, DTU ratified the Danish code of conduct for research integrity and has, based on this, formulated its own DTU code of conduct.
Good scientific practice is defined by three overarching principles:
- Honesty
- Transparency
- Accountability
The DTU code of conduct covers six main aspects of good scientific practice:
- Research planning and conduct
- Data management
- Publication and communication
- Authorship
- Collaborative research
- Conflicts of interest
Aside from these main areas, which can also be found in the Danish code of conduct, the DTU code of conduct features several specific examples of how researchers at DTU should adhere to the general guidelines.
Failure to comply with the principles for good scientific practice may constitute questionable research practice or scientific misconduct.
What is questionable research practice?
Questionable research practice is defined in the law on scientific misconduct as
‘Any breach of commonly accepted standards for responsible conduct in research, including the standards described in the Danish code of conduct for research integrity and other relevant institutional, national or international practices and guidelines for integrity in research’.
Questionable research practices are behaviours which may negatively influence the quality of the research conducted, or which at the very least may raise questions about its credibility. An important thing to understand about questionable research practices is that they may occur even if there is no intention to deceive, but simply as a result of carelessness. Examples of questionable research practice are;
- Sloppy research methods or analyses
- Conscious or unconscious bias
- Ignoring ethical guidelines
- Denying attribution of authorship to qualifying contributors
Thus, questionable research practice represents a grey area between ideal behaviour and scientific misconduct. Cases of questionable research practice are handled internally at DTU, see guidelines for further information.
What is scientific misconduct?
Scientific misconduct is a deliberate or grossly negligent breach of the standards for scientific conduct in scientific research. The law on scientific misconduct defines this through three types of unacceptable behaviour.
- Fabrication: Unreported construction of data or substitution for fictitious data.
- Falsification: Manipulation of research material, equipment or processes, as well as changing or leaving out data or results, whereby the research appears misleading.
- Plagiarism: Acquisition of other people’s ideas, processes, results, text or special terms without appropriate accreditation.
Cases of scientific misconduct will be forwarded to the Danish committee for scientific misconduct. See guidelines for handling suspicions regarding misconduct and questionable research practice for further information about this process.
Danish committee for scientific misconduct
In Denmark, cases involving scientific misconduct are handled by the Danish committee for scientific misconduct. The committee only handles cases, which are significant for Danish research, meaning cases involving research conducted at a Danish institution, by Danish scientists or research financed by Danish funding bodies.
A case can be raised by submission of a formal complaint, or you can request that the committee take up a case, in order for you to be cleared of charges in the form of circulating rumors. Each year the committee produces an annual review of their decisions.
Contact
Merian Skouw Haugwitz-Hardenberg-Reventlow Chief Intelligence Officer Office for Research, Advice and Innovation Mobile: +45 25320325 mehau@dtu.dk