I have a question pertaining to the ethics and standard practices of scientific publication in the academic community, specifically with regards to bioinformatics. Today, I received an unsolicited email from a bioinformatics services company called Accurascience, claiming that I should consider using their commercial service for my bioinformatics analysis. I browsed through their website and could not find any mention or instruction or requirement for proper citation upon publication. I was also a bit taken aback by the following: http://www.scientificspam.net/?p=55
I decided to search "Accurascience" in PubMed, which returned zero results, and then followed up with a Google search to see whether or not people were actually citing Accurascience for their analysis. No relevant hits were found in a Google search either. I then read one of the clients' testimonials claiming that they had cited the company website in their PNAS paper. After finding this PNAS paper online, I noticed that no citation to Accurascience was actually given. Instead, the attribution of the analysis went to individual authors on the paper. -> Question: Is it really legal for people using a bioinformatics commercial service to attribute the bioinformatics work to themselves in publications? There just seems something majorly wrong with this.
I am not sure if this is a prime example of scientific misconduct or not, but I am confused as to why proper attribution wasn't given to Accurascience in the Hu et al. PNAS paper, whether it is ethical to outsource bioinformatics analysis like this (e.g., how many more ghost authorship papers like this exist?), and finally how it could possibly be ethical in the academic community to benefit from such commercial analysis without proper attribution to the company name that provides the service.
I appreciate any input you may have.
Nice job actually reading the paper rather than just skimming through it like the rest of us! This should really be the accepted answer.
Definitely not accusing anyone here, read the post. Accusing someone of accusing however, I don't appreciate. I will, however, say that relegating Accurascience to the SI and misleading a whole group of scientists here (however much "skimming" we all really did) that the analysis was performed by the three authors (as stated in the main paper) is simply put: very bad practice. This should have been corrected by the eminent NIAID authority. It may have also been done with the intention to mislead: food for thought. Due credit should be given where due credit is due (especially in the main body of the paper), industry or academia alike. In this regard, I completely agree with Jean Karim-Heriche and Devon Ryan.
That's not misleading, it isn't a bad practice, you didn't read the paper.
I didn't read the whole thing either, I went to materials and methods, saw that the NGS stuff was in a supplement and checked there. It took all of 30 seconds.
Fee for service companies or even core services/etc don't always end up on papers. They are otherwise acknowledged in the article as in this case (as are the methods used). You need to understand that there's a large difference between authorship and acknowledgment. Just because contributed doesn't mean they're an author and just because they're not listed as an author it doesn't mean that any dishonest or unethical actions have occurred.
Not to mention, everyone who contributes has a choice in if they're listed as an author. As others have mentioned, authorship isn't trivial, it has added responsibilities which translate to additional work. It is perfectly reasonable for a company to not want its employees as authors, it costs them money. 10 hours spent on writing, editing and aiding in reviewer response is 10 hours spent not working on other projects.
I don't see how there's any issue here.
Indeed. We've analysed thousands and thousands of exomes for customers, I can count the number of papers we're co-author on for that on the fingers of one hand. A few folk add an acknowledgement. 99.99% do neither.
I don't know, I probably would have worded all of that the same way they did it in the paper. Mentioning that in the SI is fine as far as I'm concerned. I don't think they were trying to mislead anyone.
Devon, I'm saying that if the lion's share of the bioinformatics work was done by Accurascience, this should be made explicitly clear in the author contributions section and not be bluntly attributed to the paper authors. If not in contributions, then at least acknowledgements, at least so that it's not relegated to outside the main body of the paper, something not every reader looks at (especially on first reading of the paper). Otherwise, it's misleading.
Shoving stuff like this in the supplemental info section is pretty much par for the course these days. The exponential growth of supplemental information sections is a vastly bigger issue than any minor moot issue like this.
This is especially true for high impact journals. It seems like most nature papers end up looking like abstracts compared to their SI.
The bioinformatics analysis methods described in the supp. info doesn't seem better or worse than most publications out there. Whether that's acceptable is another issue.
I agree with Joe that I don't think we should discriminate against bioinformaticians just because they work in a non-academic setting.