4.3 Article

Integrity in cardiovascular imaging research

Journal

CLINICAL IMAGING
Volume 96, Issue -, Pages 31-33

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinimag.2023.01.011

Keywords

Medical imaging; Cardiology; Research; Scientific misconduct; Fraud; Trust

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This study aimed to gain insight into scientific integrity in cardiovascular imaging research by conducting a survey among corresponding authors. The results from the questionnaire completed by 160 corresponding authors revealed a high overall confidence in the integrity of published scientific work in cardiovascular imaging. However, issues such as scientific fraud, publication bias, and honorary authorship were reported.
Objective: To gain more insight in scientific integrity in the field of cardiovascular imaging research by con-ducting a survey among all corresponding authors who published in cardiovascular imaging journals.Methods: Corresponding authors who published in one of eight major cardiovascular imaging journals in 2021 were requested to complete a questionnaire about scientific integrity in the field of cardiovascular imaging.Results: Responses from 160 corresponding authors were received. The majority of respondents had a medical doctor degree (81.1%), held an academic position (93.8%, of which 44.0% as full professor), and had >10 years of research experience (72.5%). Overall confidence in the integrity of published scientific work in cardiovascular imaging was high, with a median score of 8 out of 10 (IQR 2). 5 respondents (3.1%) declared having committed scientific fraud in the past 5 years and 38 respondents (23.8%) declared having witnessed or suspected scientific fraud by anyone from their department in the past 5 years. 85.6% of respondents think that publication bias is present. 50% of respondents declared that any of their publications in the past 5 years had a co-author who actually did not deserve this co-authorship.Conclusion: Experts in the field report that several forms of scientific fraud, publication bias, and honorary authorship are present in cardiovascular imaging research. Despite these reports of academic dishonesty, overall confidence in the integrity of cardiovascular imaging research is deemed high.

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