We've all done it-fudged that measurement in a school science exercise to make the answer come out just right. Well, it looks as if we are in venerable company. In a paper in this week's Nature, Brian Martinson, from the HealthPartners Research Foundation in Minneapolis, and Melissa Anderson and Raymond de Vries from the University of Minnesota, report the results of a survey of the ethical habits of American biomedical scientists. In this, the first large study of its kind, they found that 33% of respondents admitted committing at least one professionally dubious act in the previous three years.
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机译:我们都做过了-在学校科学练习中对测量进行了捏造,以使答案恰到好处。好吧,好像我们在一个古老的公司。在本周的《自然》杂志的一篇论文中,来自明尼阿波利斯的HealthPartners研究基金会的Brian Brianson和来自明尼苏达大学的Melissa Anderson和Raymond de Vries报告了美国生物医学科学家的道德习惯调查结果。在这项同类研究中,这是首次大型研究,他们发现33%的受访者承认在过去三年中犯了至少一项职业可疑行为。
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