Guilt by Association: How Scientific Misconduct Harms Prior Collaborators

ZEW Discussion Paper No. 17-051 // 2017
ZEW Discussion Paper No. 17-051 // 2017

Guilt by Association: How Scientific Misconduct Harms Prior Collaborators

Recent highly publicized cases of scientific misconduct have raised concerns about its consequences for academic careers. Previous and anecdotal evidence suggests that these reach far beyond the fraudulent scientist and her career, affecting coauthors and institutions. Here we show that the negative effects of scientific misconduct spill over to uninvolved prior collaborators: compared to a control group, prior collaborators of misconducting scientists, who have no link to the misconduct case, are cited 8 to 9% less afterwards. We suggest that the mechanism underlying this phenomenon is stigmatization by mere association. The result suggests that scientific misconduct generates large indirect costs in the form of mistrust against a wider range of research findings than was previously assumed. The broad fallout of misconduct implies that potential whistleblowers might be disinclined to make their concerns public in order to protect their own reputation and career.

Hussinger, Katrin and Maikel Pellens (2017), Guilt by Association: How Scientific Misconduct Harms Prior Collaborators, ZEW Discussion Paper No. 17-051, Mannheim.