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The Hong Kong Principles for assessing researchers: Fostering research integrity
Author(s) -
David Moher,
L.M. Bouter,
Sabine Kleinert,
Paul Glasziou,
MH Sham,
Virginia Barbour,
Anne-Marie Coriat,
Nicole Foeger,
Ulrich Dirnagl
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.127
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1545-7885
pISSN - 1544-9173
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000737
Subject(s) - research integrity , trustworthiness , transparency (behavior) , engineering ethics , rigour , open science , inclusion (mineral) , research ethics , scientific misconduct , public relations , data science , computer science , political science , sociology , internet privacy , epistemology , social science , alternative medicine , engineering , medicine , computer security , philosophy , physics , pathology , astronomy
For knowledge to benefit research and society, it must be trustworthy. Trustworthy research is robust, rigorous, and transparent at all stages of design, execution, and reporting. Assessment of researchers still rarely includes considerations related to trustworthiness, rigor, and transparency. We have developed the Hong Kong Principles (HKPs) as part of the 6th World Conference on Research Integrity with a specific focus on the need to drive research improvement through ensuring that researchers are explicitly recognized and rewarded for behaviors that strengthen research integrity. We present five principles: responsible research practices; transparent reporting; open science (open research); valuing a diversity of types of research; and recognizing all contributions to research and scholarly activity. For each principle, we provide a rationale for its inclusion and provide examples where these principles are already being adopted.

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