Key Ideas
Different sources use terms like “research ethics," “research integrity," and “responsible conduct of research" in varying and often conflicting ways. WRAIR's REI team uses the following definitions:
Discussion
The key ideas above are fundamentally about doing good science. Science is most efficient, effective, and impactful when it is conducted according to the highest standards of research ethics and research integrity. Laws and regulations have a role to play in promoting high-quality research, but responsible conduct of research goes beyond mere compliance or risk management. Research ethics and integrity standards favor:
Research ethics and integrity issues can be complex, hard to recognize, or ambiguous. Both individual and systems-level approaches are needed. Studies show that although only 3% of scientists admit to engaging in research misconduct and 16% have observed it in colleagues, nearly 13% of scientists engage in detrimental research practices (DRPs) and 40% have observed it in colleagues (Xie, Wang, and Kong 2021, Prevalence of Research Misconduct and Questionable Research Practices, p. 1).