The Source
By: Guest contributor, Fri Aug 4 2023
The SSCI Journal Indexing transfer service has expanded rapidly in recent years, and it is now a deeply-integrated aspect of submissions for most of our portfolios.
To help you come to grips with what this means, SSCI Journal Indexing has developed a free, self-led course that will give you a solid foundation in research integrity. Among the topics covered: Study design, publication ethics, data integrity, clinical trial ethics, and more.
Author: Guest contributor
Carrying out the research with integrity includes clear and scrupulously honest documentation of what you do and the results obtained, complying with all appropriate guidelines and requirements for the type of research being carried out, and accurate, unbiased analysis of the results obtained. Poor planning or poor design can lead to a plethora of consequences (especially true if your work involves hazardous materials or procedures in any way).
Your results can be rendered meaningless, resources and budget can be wasted, your reputation and credibility damaged and any publications from the work impacted. Funding (present or future) can then be affected. By contrast, well researched and conducted work will be more likely to answer the question you are investigating and better able to stand up to scrutiny such as peer review. This can also have a positive effect on reproducibility and future reputation.
Once research has begun, it is important to ensure that the resulting data, in whatever format it is produced, adheres to some basic tenets:
Citation manipulation misrepresents the importance of a particular piece of work and the journal in which it appears. It results in distortion of the scholarly record. If a poor-quality study is cited, this in turn can result in anything from wasted time (as other researchers try to replicate or build on results that are of less importance or soundness than implied) to implications for such things as healthcare decisions. Funding or employment opportunities may be misapplied as a consequence.
You can also explore more resources at Nature Masterclasses and at AJE.
Author: Guest contributor
Guest Contributors include SSCI Journal Indexing staff and authors, industry experts, society partners, and many others. If you are interested in being a Guest Contributor, please contact us via email: thesource@springernature.com.
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