Research
Results
The results
of research should be recorded and maintained in a form that
allows analysis and review, both by collaborators before publication
and by other scientists for a reasonable period after publication.
Exceptions may be appropriate in certain circumstances to preserve
privacy, to assure patent protection, or for similar reasons.
Fabrication
of data is an egregious departure from the expected norms of
scientific conduct, as is the selective reporting of data with
the intent to mislead or deceive, as well as the theft of data
or research results from others.
Publication
and Authorship Practices
The authors'
central obligation is to present a concise, accurate account
of the research performed as well as an objective discussion
of its significance. A paper should contain sufficient detail
and references to public sources of information to permit others
to repeat the work.
Proper acknowledgment
of the work of others used in a research project must always
be given. Authors should cite publications that have been influential
in determining the nature of the reported work. Information obtained
privately, as in conversation, correspondence, or discussion
with third parties, should not be used or reported without explicit
permission from the investigator with whom the information originated.
Information obtained in the course of confidential services,
such as refereeing manuscripts or grant applications, cannot
be used without permission of the author of the work being used.
Authorship
should be limited to those who have made a significant contribution
to the concept, design, execution, or interpretation of the research
study. All those who have made significant contributions should
be offered the opportunity to be listed as authors. Other individuals
who have contributed to the study should be acknowledged, but
not identified as authors. The sources of financial support for
the project should be disclosed.
Plagiarism
constitutes unethical scientific behavior and is never acceptable.
It is unethical
for an author to publish manuscripts describing essentially the
same research in more than one journal of primary publication.
Submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal concurrently
is unethical and unacceptable.
When an error
is discovered in a published work, it is the obligation of all
authors to promptly retract the paper or correct the results.
Collaborations
All collaborators
share some degree of responsibility for any paper they coauthor.
Only persons
who have significantly contributed to the research should be
listed as authors. The author who submits the paper for publication
should ensure that all appropriate coauthors and no inappropriate
coauthors are included on the paper, and that all coauthors have
seen the final version of the paper and have agreed to its submission
for publication.
Some coauthors
have responsibility for the entire paper as an accurate, verifiable
report of the research. These include, for example, coauthors
who are accountable for the integrity of the critical data reported
in the paper, carry out the analysis, write the manuscript, present
major findings at conferences, or provide scientific leadership
for junior colleagues. Other coauthors may have responsibility
mainly for specific, limited contributions to a paper.
Every coauthor
should have the opportunity to review the manuscript before it
is submitted for publication. All coauthors have an obligation
to provide prompt retractions or correction of errors in published
works. Any individual unwilling or unable to accept appropriate
responsibility for a paper should not be a coauthor.
Peer
Review
Review by
independent scientists provides advice to editors of scientific
journals concerning the publication of research results. It is
an essential component of the scientific enterprise, and all
scientists have an obligation to participate in the process.
Privileged
information or ideas obtained through peer review must be kept
confidential and not used for competitive gain. Reviewers must
disclose conflicts of interest resulting from direct competitive,
collaborative, or other relationships with any of the authors,
and avoid cases in which such conflicts preclude an objective
evaluation.
Reviewers
should judge objectively the quality of the research reported
and respect the intellectual independence of the authors. In
no case is personal criticism appropriate. Reviewers should explain
and support their judgments in such a way that editors and authors
may understand the basis of their comments.
Reviewers
should point out relevant published work that has not been cited
by the authors. Any statement that an observation, derivation,
or argument had been previously reported should be accompanied
by the relevant citation. A reviewer should also call to the
editor's attention any substantial similarity between the manuscript
under consideration and any published paper or manuscript submitted
concurrently to another journal.
A reviewer
should treat a manuscript sent for review as a confidential document.
It should neither be shown to nor discussed with others except,
in special cases, to persons from whom specific advice may be
sought; in that event, the identities of those consulted should
be disclosed to the editor.
Reviewers
should not use or disclose unpublished information, arguments,
or interpretations contained in a manuscript under consideration,
except with the consent of the author.
Editorial
Responsibilities
The editor
of a journal has complete responsibility and authority to accept
a submitted paper for publication or to reject it. The editor
may confer with associate editors or reviewers for an evaluation
to use in making this decision.
An editor
should give prompt and unbiased consideration to all manuscripts
offered for publication, judging each on its merits without regard
to race, gender, religious belief, ethnic origin, citizenship,
or political philosophy of the authors, and respecting the intellectual
independence of the authors. Situations that may lead to real
or perceived conflicts of interest should be avoided.
The editor
and the editorial staff should not disclose any information about
a manuscript under consideration to anyone other than reviewers
and potential reviewers. Unpublished information, arguments,
or interpretations disclosed in a submitted manuscript should
not be used in an editor's own research except with the consent
of the author.
An editor
presented with convincing evidence that the substance or conclusions
of a published paper are erroneous should promote the publication
of a correction or retraction.
An editor
as an author or with other vested interests in a submitted manuscript
should disclose this information and recuse themselves from any
associated editorial function. The JMR policy for this situation
is available at http://www.mrs.org/publications/jmr/policy.html.