PHS issues revised regulations on research misconduct
Public Health Service regulations on research misconduct have been revised for the first time since 2005. The changes set forth in the final rule will necessitate revisions to OSU's research misconduct policy. In compliance with the implementation schedule mandated by the regulation, the Division of Research and Innovation anticipates implementing a revised policy on January 1, 2026.
NIH Issues New Centralized Resource of Policies and Practices for Promoting Responsible Use of AI
OSP has issued a new resource to assist the research community in understanding how NIH policies guide artificial intelligence (AI)-related research. The purpose of the resource is to illustrate the applicability of existing policies and guidance to research involving AI technologies.
Journal Editors & Federal agencies on AI
- Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals, Updated by ICMJE
- Change to policy on the use of generative AI and large language models, Science
- Using AI in Peer Review is a Breach of Confidentiality, Mike Lauer, Stephanie Constant, and Amy Wernimont from NIH
- The Use of Generative Artificial Intelligence Technologies is Prohibited for the NIH Peer Review Process, NIH NOT-OD-23-149
- Why Nature will not allow the use of generative AI in images and video, Nature
- Tools such as ChatGPT threaten transparent science; here are our ground rules for their use, Nature
- Nonhuman "Authors" and Implications for the Integrity of Scientific Publication and Medical Knowledge, JAMA
- Recommendations on ChatGPT and Chatbots in Relation to Scholarly Publications, World Association of Medical Editors
- Using AI to write scholarly publications, Accountability in Research
- The challenge of AI chatbots for journal editors, Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), Guest Editorial
- Authorship and AI tools, COPE position statement
- Artificial intelligence in the news, COPE
See also: ChatGPT and Other AI Tools: Implications for Teaching and Learning, from the OSU Center for Teaching and Learning
NSF to require RCR training for faculty
NSF is expanding RCR training requirements to faculty and other senior personnel and will require that the training address "mentor training and mentorship". These new requirements apply to proposals submitted on or after July 31, 2023. NSF encourages researchers to explore training resources available through the Online Ethics Center. Researchers can also complete RCR training through CITI. More information is available in the NSF PAPPG, Chapter IX.B.1.
NIH, AHRQ, HRSA update RCR training requirements
NIH, AHRQ, and HRSA updated their existing policy and guidance for RCR instruction to (1) permit interactive video conferences for some, but not all, "in-person" training, (2) encourage ongoing, discipline-specific training, (3) add the bolded elements below to the traditional RCR training topics:
- conflict of interest – personal, professional, and financial – and conflict of commitment, in allocating time, effort, or other research resources
- policies regarding human subjects, live vertebrate animal subjects in research, and safe laboratory practices
- mentor/mentee responsibilities and relationships
- safe research environments (e.g., those that promote inclusion and are free of sexual, racial, ethnic, disability and other forms of discriminatory harassment)
- collaborative research, including collaborations with industry and investigators and institutions in other countries
- peer review, including the responsibility for maintaining confidentiality and security in peer review
- data acquisition and analysis; laboratory tools (e.g., tools for analyzing data and creating or working with digital images); recordkeeping practices, including methods such as electronic laboratory notebooks
- secure and ethical data use; data confidentiality, management, sharing, and ownership
- research misconduct and policies for handling misconduct
- responsible authorship and publication
- the scientist as a responsible member of society, contemporary ethical issues in biomedical research, and the environmental and societal impacts of scientific research
Changes should be incorporated into plans for RCR instruction for the 2022-2023 academic year and in new and renewal applications for research training, career development, research education and dissertation research grants beginning with the September 25, 2022 due dates. More information is available in the FY 2022 Updated Guidance: Requirement for Instruction in the Responsible Conduct of Research, Notice Number: NOT-OD-22-055