1
Accepted
Insufficient quantitative evidence on UK research integrity issues hinders effective policy responses.
Conclusion
Although qualitative evidence indicates a potentially substantial scale of research integrity issues in the UK, there is a lack of quantitative evidence, including on the relative significance of the different causes of problems. This can only hamper efforts to evaluate damage being caused to the UK research sector in terms of culture, performance, reputation and economic value—now and in the future. This in turn prevents the design of proportionate and effective solutions to any problems.
Government Response Summary
The government states that the newly established UKRI Committee on Research Integrity (UK CORI) has a role in improving the evidence base on research integrity, thereby addressing the identified lack of quantitative data.
Paragraph Reference
27
Government Response
Accepted
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
Establishing a new UKRI Committee on Research Integrity (UK CORI). UK CORI has a role in improving the evidence base on research integrity as well as promoting research integrity in the UK and internationally.
Source
Report
Sixth Report - Reproducibility and Research Integrity
10 May 2023
HC 101
Addressee Bodies
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
Timeline
Recommendation age
3.1 yrs
Report published
10 May 2023