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“When good stem cell treatments for ALS and other horrible diseases are finally realized, it will come from places other than the richest, most powerful nation in history.”
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Fiasco Rings the Alarm PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 12 January 2006

Source: China Daily 

Disgraced scientist Hwang Woo-suk yesterday apologized for faking data in two research papers on stem cells. Just months ago, these papers won him adulation in his home country of the Republic of Korea, and fame across the world.
With unshakable evidence and conclusion by investigators from his school, Seoul National University, his apology was inevitable.

Cheating is not new to the science sector in any part of the world.

Still, the case should sound loud alarm bells for all, with Hwang stripped of the title of "supreme scientist."

But why he was held in such high esteem in his country is a question that needs to be pondered.

China's science and research circles should pay special attention to the case because a weak review and evaluation system for research results a key underlying reason for Hwang's fraudulent act is also a problem in China.

China has made great achievements in science and technology. Some of these innovations are world-class.

But the problems should be not overlooked. Incidents of plagiarism and fabricated facts in Chinese researchers' work have often been heard in recent years.

Many of the faked research achievements have survived evaluation by academic judges and peers before being revealed by whistle-blowers.

In fact, the evaluations are sometimes based on connections rather than solid scientific grounds.

Assessment of scientists' general performance in many research institutions is not flawless either.

Criticism about the assessment criteria, which give big weight to the number of articles published and number of citings by international periodicals, has been going on for many years.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 29 June 2006 )
 
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