Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Academic Cheating
- Part II Academic Excuses and Fairness
- Part III Authorship and Credit
- 12 An Ethical Dilemma in Publishing
- 13 What Does Authorship Mean?
- 14 The Ethical Use of Published Scales
- 15 Idea Poaching Behind the Veil of Blind Peer Review
- 16 An Ethical Challenge
- 17 Authorship
- 18 Publication of Student Data When the Student Cannot Be Contacted
- 19 Ethics in Research
- 20 Resolving Ethical Lapses in the Non-Publication of Dissertations
- 21 Theft
- 22 Claiming the Ownership of Someone Else’s Idea
- 23 Commentary to Part III
- Part IV Confidentiality’s Limits
- Part V Data Analysis, Reporting, and Sharing
- Part VI Designing Research
- Part VII Fabricating Data
- Part VIII Human Subjects
- Part IX Personnel Decisions
- Part X Reviewing and Editing
- Part XI Science for Hire and Conflict of Interest
- Epilogue Why Is Ethical Behavior Challenging?
- Index
12 - An Ethical Dilemma in Publishing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Academic Cheating
- Part II Academic Excuses and Fairness
- Part III Authorship and Credit
- 12 An Ethical Dilemma in Publishing
- 13 What Does Authorship Mean?
- 14 The Ethical Use of Published Scales
- 15 Idea Poaching Behind the Veil of Blind Peer Review
- 16 An Ethical Challenge
- 17 Authorship
- 18 Publication of Student Data When the Student Cannot Be Contacted
- 19 Ethics in Research
- 20 Resolving Ethical Lapses in the Non-Publication of Dissertations
- 21 Theft
- 22 Claiming the Ownership of Someone Else’s Idea
- 23 Commentary to Part III
- Part IV Confidentiality’s Limits
- Part V Data Analysis, Reporting, and Sharing
- Part VI Designing Research
- Part VII Fabricating Data
- Part VIII Human Subjects
- Part IX Personnel Decisions
- Part X Reviewing and Editing
- Part XI Science for Hire and Conflict of Interest
- Epilogue Why Is Ethical Behavior Challenging?
- Index
Summary
As a newly appointed associate professor in a well-known medical school’s department of psychiatry, I was assigned by the chair of the department to a prominent research laboratory. This position required that I learn a new body of research and participate in the ongoing research programs of the laboratory as well as developing my own funded and unfunded research programs. One day, during a conference on one of the patients seen in our laboratory, the laboratory director, a very prominent psychiatrist, asked if I would be willing to review a book for a prominent medical journal. This was a very prestigious journal, and the book was on a topic that I was beginning to research, so I believed I knew the literature reasonably well. It also occurred to me that publishing this review would enhance my visibility and reputation in the psychiatric community. Based on these perceptions, I was eager to immerse myself in the process; I agreed and gratefully took the rather large volume and spent the next two weeks reading the book and articulating a rather thorough commentary on its strengths and weaknesses.
I was very pleased when, two days after I turned the review in to my laboratory director, I received his thanks and compliments for the thorough job I had done. He indicated that he would forward the review to the journal within the next few days. Nothing more was said about the matter until I came across my review while reading another article in the medical journal to which the review had been submitted. Lo and behold, there was my carefully crafted review of the book – not a word had been changed, except.... I was not the author. The laboratory director’s name appeared prominently where mine should have been.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ethical Challenges in the Behavioral and Brain SciencesCase Studies and Commentaries, pp. 35 - 37Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015