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Good Research Practices

Good Research Practices. The term has become ethically laden. Practicalities. Data management Publishing decisions Data interpretation Personnel supervision Fraud detection Conflict of Interest management. And on and on…. Rules for Notebooks. Permanent binding Numbered pages

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Good Research Practices

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  1. Good Research Practices

  2. The term has become ethically laden

  3. Practicalities • Data management • Publishing decisions • Data interpretation • Personnel supervision • Fraud detection • Conflict of Interest management And on and on…

  4. Rules for Notebooks • Permanent binding • Numbered pages • Paper of good quality • Permanent, light resistant ink, no pencil

  5. Front Matter • Name, address, email, phone number on front cover • Notebook number on front cover if relevant • Table of Contents ( 2 pages) • Table of Abbreviations

  6. Frances Richmond Sept 20,2004 Electronic records

  7. You must not………. • Tear out pages • Erase or obliterate entries • Write on non-sequential pages • Leave pages empty

  8. Changes to Entries Cross out with a single line, change below, then sign and date change Mass = 2.4 kg Mass = 2.4 kg 2.8 kg, F Richmond, Sept 20,2004

  9. But I want to use an electronic notebook! • What are the problems? • How do we solve the problems?

  10. Storing notebooks • Store working notebooks in a secure location • Archive old notebooks according to a system, usually for 20 years

  11. Notebooks in a multiuser environment Avoid entries in multiple notebooks—a single project should preferably have a single book, and different contributors should sign and date contributions

  12. Keeping Track of work… • Issue numbered notebooks to specific users who are responsible for the book • Issue guidance and training on the use of the book

  13. Who owns “my” notebook? • Not you, unless you are working for free with your own space and materials • Generally your employer—be sure you understand who owns the book if you have more than one employer

  14. So where and what do I write? No derogatory remarks! • Begin each experiment on a right-handed page • Write date unambiguously in upper corner • Title • Objective • Chemical equations • Required materials • Numbered steps for procedure • Record results and insights immediately—no detail too small!

  15. When and who collects the data? • Date must be clear • Date must be attested • Signature of inventor/investigator • Signature of corroborating witness • Not a collaborator or individual with a conflict of interest • Someone who can and has read and understood the work • Someone who respects confidentiality Read and understood Frances Richmond September 2, 2004

  16. Quality matters! • If the notebook is messy it will be discredited as a reliable source • If a book is too clean, it will be discredited as well! • If it contains mistakes, valuable time and resources may be squandered

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