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Fraud Scandals Sap China’s Dream of Becoming a Science Superpower

F-22Raptor

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BEIJING — Having conquered world markets and challenged American political and military leadership, China has set its sights on becoming a global powerhouse in a different field: scientific research. It now has more laboratory scientists than any other country, outspends the entire European Union on research and development, and produces more scientific articles than any other nation except the United States.

But in its rush to dominance, China has stood out in another, less boastful way. Since 2012, the country has retracted more scientific papers because of faked peer reviews than all other countries and territories put together, according to Retraction Watch, a blog that tracks and seeks to publicize retractions of research papers.

Now, a recent string of high-profile scandals over questionable or discredited research has driven home the point in China that to become a scientific superpower, it must first overcome a festering problem of systemic fraud.

“China wants to become a global leader in science,” said Zhang Lei, a professor of applied physics at Xi’an Jiaotong University. “But how do you achieve that and still preserve the quality of science? We still haven’t figured out how to do that yet.”

In April, a scientific journal retracted 107 biology research papers, the vast majority of them written by Chinese authors, after evidence emerged that they had faked glowing reviews of their articles. Then, this summer, a Chinese gene scientist who had won celebrity status for breakthroughs once trumpeted as Nobel Prize-worthy was forced to retract his research when other scientists failed to replicate his results.

At the same time, a government investigation highlighted the existence of a thriving online black market that sells everything from positive peer reviews to entire research articles.

President Xi Jinping, whose leadership is expected to be reaffirmed at a Communist Party congress that begins next week, has stated his goal of turning China into “a global scientific and technology power” by 2049. But the revelations have been a setback to this effort.

China has, of course, made enormous strides in science, research and technology. Worried that its economy is still too dependent on low-end manufacturing, the government is investing hundreds of billions of dollars in developing high-tech industries like semiconductors, solar panels, artificial intelligence, medical technologies and electric cars.

China has built extensive infrastructure across the country, with roads, railroads, ports and bridges that exhibit enviable engineering prowess. And it has reshaped many other parts of the world by exporting its expertise, offering it yet another way to drive its rapid economic growth.

But it has also endured problems of piracy and poor quality that have plagued its economic rise, blemishing what has been an otherwise dramatic entry into the ranks of the world’s leading scientific nations.

China has made inroads partly because of its willingness to invest in new research at a time when such spending has stagnated in countries like the United States and Japan. The government in Beijing has poured the equivalent of billions of dollars into new projects in order to catch up with the West in producing original research, and also reverse decades of scientific brain drain by luring home top Western-trained Chinese researchers.

“The state needs the strategic support of science and technology more urgently than any other time in the past,” Mr. Xi said last year in announcing the 2049 goal. “The situation that our country is under others’ control in core technologies of key fields has not changed.”

Now there are worries that persistent problems of academic fraud and lax standards exposed by the recent scandals could slow China’s ascent.

Scandals over faked research results have shaken many countries, including Japan, the United States and South Korea. But fraud appears to be especially widespread in Chinese academic institutions, as seen in the large number of retracted articles and faked peer reviews.

In part, these numbers may simply reflect the enormous scale of the world’s most populous nation. But Chinese scientists also blame what they call the skewed incentives they say are embedded within their nation’s academic system.

As in the West, career advancement can often seem to be based more on the quantity of research papers published rather than the quality. However, in China, scientists there say, this obsession with numerical goal posts can reach extremes. Compounding the problem, they say, is the fact that Chinese universities and research institutes suffer from a lack of oversight, and mete out weak punishments for those who are caught cheating.

Put these together and the result is an academic system that is willing to wink at ethical lapses, they say.

“In America, if you purposely falsify data, then your career in academia is over,” Professor Zhang said. “But in China, the cost of cheating is very low. They won’t fire you. You might not get promoted immediately, but once people forget, then you might have a chance to move up.”

Some scientists say China’s overemphasis on numerical measures of success can be seen in its almost single-minded focus on the Science Citation Index, or S.C.I. This index is used to assign an “impact factor” score to scientific journals, which ranks their importance in part by counting how many times their articles are cited in other papers.

Getting an article published in a high-ranking journal can lead to career promotions and monetary rewards. Many Chinese universities offer hefty research grants and salary bonuses to faculty members who get published in journals with high impact factors. In June, Sichuan Agricultural University in Ya’an awarded a group of researchers about $2 million in funding after members got a paper published in the academic journal Cell.

“Everything revolves around the S.C.I.,” said Chen Li, a professor in the medical school at Fudan University in Shanghai. He and other scientists compared Chinese academia’s obsession with this numerical index to the government’s fixation on gross domestic product as a measure of economic success.

“Sometimes we joke that to evaluate faculty in China, all you need is a primary school kid who can do addition,” Professor Chen said. “Just add up the impact factors of the different journals.”

One result has been increasingly elaborate schemes for getting papers into prestigious journals. These include the use of faked peer reviews, a practice that came under strict scrutiny following the retraction of 107 biology papers last spring — the largest such mass retraction by a single journal in history. Many of those authors were clinical doctors, who in China face intense pressure to publish.

They took advantage of the fact that many scholarly journals rely on evaluations by other scientists in the same field in deciding whether to publish a paper. Some journals — including Tumor Biology, which retracted the 107 articles — go so far as to ask the authors themselves to suggest peers to write these reviews, a fact that critics say opened the door to fraud.

In Tumor Biology’s case, government investigators found that many of the authors had submitted the names of real researchers, but with fabricated email addresses. This apparently allowed the authors, or more often writers hired by the authors, to pose as academic peers, and write positive reviews that would help get their own papers published.

According to an investigation led by the country’s Ministry of Science and Technology, Chinese researchers used such methods to manipulate the peer-review process in 101 out of the 107 retracted articles. In many cases, government investigators said authors had gone online to hire people to write professional-sounding reviews.

A recent search revealed a teeming, illicit trade in faked peer reviews. A search for the term “help publishing papers” on Taobao, a popular Chinese e-commerce site, yielded a long list of sellers who offered services ranging from faked peer reviews to entire scientific papers already written and ready to submit. Depending on the service, they charge from a few hundred dollars up to $10,000.

“We have helped professors of all backgrounds,” one seller wrote through Taobao’s chat function. “Don’t worry, we’ll keep it a secret.”

Fang Shimin, a prominent muckraking blogger, said: “The fraud techniques have become more sophisticated. They’re not as easy to uncover.”

Over all, experts say, there are signs that the academic environment in China is improving. Plagiarism appears to be in decline thanks to new detection tools, and Chinese-born researchers returning from universities overseas have brought back best practices, helping to raise ethical standards.

But the pressure to produce original, groundbreaking research remains. Many say that appears to have been the case with Han Chunyu, a scientist at Hebei University of Science and Technology who made a big splash last year by claiming that he had found a new way to edit human genes — a technique that could one day make it possible to eliminate hereditary diseases, or allow parents to tailor their unborn children’s height or I.Q.

The claim, contained in a paper published in the journal Nature Biotechnology, made Mr. Han an overnight celebrity. The local government even offered to build a $32 million gene-editing research center at his university, which he would run.

Then, late last year, other scientists began reporting failures replicating Mr. Han’s results. Facing mounting pressure, he and his co-authors finally retracted the paper, though they have since vowed to clear their names.

“When it comes to research culture and academic integrity, it all depends on self-discipline,” said Zhang Yuehong, editor of the Journal of Zhejiang University, who has studied the problem of plagiarism in research articles. “We need to work harder to develop a culture of integrity.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/13/world/asia/china-science-fraud-scandals.html
 
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Typical cheap journalism of one incident and painted all.

So if American has a few scam and all American science are fake?

You mean supercomputer clocking speed verdict by external committee or quantum communication collaborate with Austria side are also all set up?

Jealousy has know no bout. :enjoy:
 
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The biggest different between Western scientists and Chinese scientists is Western scientists do it for passion, while Chinese scientists do it for prestige and money.
Another fake lies make up by western bootlicker. You analogy is 180 degrees different.

Then why did not all Chinese scientist flocked to US and do science work since their paid is higher compare to working in China? Or until u want to denial the fact wages in US is lower compare to China?

You know why large number of US white peoples become entrepreneurs and banker instead of scientist? Becos they love money and no passion.

China boast a long history of rich civilization and we can count on this fact to work on science for passion. American work only for money. Their federal government is made of many corporate interest members who care nothing but money only.

If you are rich, very unlikely you can climb high up into CPC.
 
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China boast a long history of rich civilization and we can count on this fact to work on science for passion.
If that is true, then China should have been among the world's top scientific achievers during the communist yrs.

What happened ? Was Mao's Little Red Book not motivating enough ?

American work only for money.
Why is that bad ? Considering China today, looks like we are not so different, eh ?

If you are rich, very unlikely you can climb high up into CPC.
Yah...Am sure Comrade Xi is very average in wealth.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...amily-has-wealth-of-hundreds-of-millions.html
 
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Just teething problems.... in 5 years they should be pushing ahead of rest
 
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Pfff!!!! Before I dig into any articles posted here, I check to see who's written it. If it ain't from some Chinese/Asian writer, I simply ignore the article and skip to read the comments. Reason I even bother to click on these threads is the title seems hilarious, good for amusement...
 
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If that is true, then China should have been among the world's top scientific achievers during the communist yrs.

What happened ? Was Mao's Little Red Book not motivating enough ?


Why is that bad ? Considering China today, looks like we are not so different, eh ?


Yah...Am sure Comrade Xi is very average in wealth.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...amily-has-wealth-of-hundreds-of-millions.html
Paper, compass, crossbow, ship building??? China been innovating for almost 1000 of years and only been stagnant for last 200 years and now we got someone try twisting fact and want to see Rome Build in a single day to prove to facts?

Mao is never about Chinese cultural, isn't his cultural revolution is a clash with Chinese history? Fancy you can used his era to try prove something? Didn't China prove innnovate enough in last 10 years with quantum communication, advanced civil engineering technics and innovative business model which the western can never crisp of rising China?
 
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...only been stagnant for last 200 years...
Like it or not, that is the only time that matters.

We are living in unprecedented technological times, and I think your reading of technology issues, whether they are in in-depth books or lengthy magazine articles or technical journals, are seriously lacking.

Mao is never about Chinese cultural, isn't his cultural revolution is a clash with Chinese history? Fancy you can used his era to try prove something?
YOU argued that somehow you Chinese pursued science out of knowledge's sake and implied that made you unique among the world's peoples. If that is true, then when China was experimenting with Marxism and communism, the absence of capitalism, the root of all evils, should have made Mao-ist China a technological powerhouse.

I was not trying to 'prove' anything. Rather, the burden of proof for your claim is entirely upon YOU.

Didn't China prove innnovate enough in last 10 years with quantum communication, advanced civil engineering technics and innovative business model which the western can never crisp of rising China?
No, not enough. How about 100 yrs worth ? At one point, if you want to learn Chemistry and contribute to the science, you had to know German. Further back, it was Greek for philosophy or Arabic for math and other sciences. Today, it is English for EVERYTHING. China is -- at best -- a Tier 2 contributor to humanity's progresses in science and technology. A Tier 2 contributor is when a country make occasional original inventions and innovations to existing technologies.
 
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Like it or not, that is the only time that matters.

We are living in unprecedented technological times, and I think your reading of technology issues, whether they are in in-depth books or lengthy magazine articles or technical journals, are seriously lacking.


YOU argued that somehow you Chinese pursued science out of knowledge's sake and implied that made you unique among the world's peoples. If that is true, then when China was experimenting with Marxism and communism, the absence of capitalism, the root of all evils, should have made Mao-ist China a technological powerhouse.

I was not trying to 'prove' anything. Rather, the burden of proof for your claim is entirely upon YOU.


No, not enough. How about 100 yrs worth ? At one point, if you want to learn Chemistry and contribute to the science, you had to know German. Further back, it was Greek for philosophy or Arabic for math and other sciences. Today, it is English for EVERYTHING. China is -- at best -- a Tier 2 contributor to humanity's progresses in science and technology. A Tier 2 contributor is when a country make occasional original inventions and innovations to existing technologies.
Looks like you run out of counter arguement that you try to avoid the weakness point of American which is history. A great civilization and races need to be judge by a period of time. Chinese civilization proves that with its resilient for more than 2000 years. Even the mighty Egypt civilization could not survive the modern era. While Chinese still stands.

China went thru a period of chaotic and uncertain times but withstand it and proves once again with its revival. You can keep on denial but Chinese will rise again just like after yuan dynasty or Song Dynasty :enjoy:
 
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Like it or not, that is the only time that matters.

We are living in unprecedented technological times, and I think your reading of technology issues, whether they are in in-depth books or lengthy magazine articles or technical journals, are seriously lacking.

You are talking in which time frame?

200 years ago? 19th century? WW2? post WW2 ? current? future?

YOU argued that somehow you Chinese pursued science out of knowledge's sake and implied that made you unique among the world's peoples. If that is true, then when China was experimenting with Marxism and communism, the absence of capitalism, the root of all evils, should have made Mao-ist China a technological powerhouse.

You never use your logic. Rome is never built overnight.

Mao era is the time when china start to rise from asses, you can't expect to see china as technological powerhouse in that stage; but you are starting to see her from now on.

No, not enough. How about 100 yrs worth ? At one point, if you want to learn Chemistry and contribute to the science, you had to know German. Further back, it was Greek for philosophy or Arabic for math and other sciences. Today, it is English for EVERYTHING. China is -- at best -- a Tier 2 contributor to humanity's progresses in science and technology. A Tier 2 contributor is when a country make occasional original inventions and innovations to existing technologies.

Again, in which period you are talking?

200 years ago? 19th century? WW2? post WW2 ? current? future?

Currently, china has start to contribute huge in science & technology challenging US, Europe Japan.

In the next 10 year from now, you may see china topple US as the leader in S&T.
 
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Looks like you run out of counter arguement that you try to avoid the weakness point of American which is history. A great civilization and races need to be judge by a period of time. Chinese civilization proves that with its resilient for more than 2000 years. Even the mighty Egypt civilization could not survive the modern era. While Chinese still stands.

China went thru a period of chaotic and uncertain times but withstand it and proves once again with its revival. You can keep on denial but Chinese will rise again just like after yuan dynasty or Song Dynasty :enjoy:
You can hang on to history all you want, but for every generation, its perception of the country's greatness is directly linked to -- at best -- two or three previous generations. To the current Chinese, other than emotional, what benefit can he/she derived from knowing that scientific achievements China had 1000 yrs ago ? Other than emotional and national pride -- none.

China experimented with communism and that turned out to be a disaster, so much that even Party leaders admitted it. Among the consequences of that disaster is the scientific and technological set back that reduced China to 3rd world status. Knowing that China have been around for 2000 yrs help in what ways ?

Being young in terms of existence is not a 'weakness', especially when the older countries are struggling to keep up.
 
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chinese work hard but not smart. tweaking their software could have saved loads of time but the thots in the management are too high stuck up in their asses to do anything so the dumbasses have to work long hours that a western company do in 6 hours.

Ever heard of the difference between deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning? Let me break it down for you. You see one bad apple and you conclude all apples are bad. That's inductive reasoning. Racial stereotyping? Inductive too. If you don't want to come across as a dumbass at least try not to reason as one. Cheers:cheers:
 
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You can hang on to history all you want, but for every generation, its perception of the country's greatness is directly linked to -- at best -- two or three previous generations.

Perception only limited to at best 2 or 3 previous generation is an ignorant perception.

Thats saying why you fail to see the dynamic and potential of china as S&T powerhouse.

To the current Chinese, other than emotional, what benefit can he/she derived from knowing that scientific achievements China had 1000 yrs ago ? Other than emotional and national pride -- none.

Self confidence; and awareness that motivate them to regain that level.

China experimented with communism and that turned out to be a disaster, so much that even Party leaders admitted it. Among the consequences of that disaster is the scientific and technological set back that reduced China to 3rd world status. Knowing that China have been around for 2000 yrs help in what ways ?

Help to identify the root cause of the fall of her.

Having learned from 2000 yrs of her history of her glory and fall, now they realize that "corruption", "instability" can make them weak and become prey of great power.

Now you see how their government work hard to eradicate corruption, and keep one party to ensure stability, and strengthen her military might to keep her threat away; that thanks to on how they learn from their own 2000 yrs history.

You see now that there is another big country with more than 1 billion people still unable to catch up while china has demonstrated how she catch up with Japan/Europe even USA and very FAST with unprecedented pace, and by seeing her current achievement we should not doubt that not in distant future she will leave them in in the dust.

What other else excuse you want to say now? :coffee:
 
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