elduvelle, (edited )
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

People who write #ResearchGrants: do you write about

  1. projects that you’ve already almost completed (hiding the fact that they’re almost completed, so that you can use the funding for completely new projects), or
  2. new projects that you haven’t really started yet (for which you might just have some preliminary data)?

Do you think 1) is unethical? Do you think 1) is necessary? Do you think 1) has the highest chances of funding? Please comment :)

#Academia #GrantWriting #Research

IanSudbery,
@IanSudbery@genomic.social avatar

@elduvelle

There is a third option - write about almost completed projects, but don't hid the fact they are almost completed. Some funders are well known for only funding projects that are almost complete - the joke being that they fund the last figure.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@IanSudbery oh I didn’t know this was a thing! Do you have examples of such funders?

IanSudbery,
@IanSudbery@genomic.social avatar

@elduvelle The UK's MRC is commonly believed to only fund work where the preliminary data is so solid that it could almost be published as it is.

MCDuncanLab,
@MCDuncanLab@mstdn.social avatar

@IanSudbery @elduvelle

It's the same here. Here's the preliminary data, and I really just need to cross the Is and dot the Ts and maybe look at it in a different context.

Aim 3 is usually less finished, but if you are proposing to discover something, you'll get dinged for a fishing expedition.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@MCDuncanLab wow… that’s pretty sad :( but I’m afraid you’re right… hope you don’t mind me quoting you!
@IanSudbery

knutson_brain,
@knutson_brain@sfba.social avatar

@elduvelle option 1.5

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@knutson_brain do you mean the “third option” as mentioned by @IanSudbery ( https://genomic.social/@IanSudbery/111811166057027577 ) or something else?

cian,
@cian@mstdn.science avatar

@elduvelle I think there's a big gap between UK and US on this (don't know about other countries). In US it seemed like an open secret that you put a whole papers worth of work as "preliminary" data on your NIH app. In UK you still need prelim data but nowhere near as much. I even got a Leverhulme grant with zero prelim data.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@cian Interesting! I wasn’t aware of that country philosophy difference..

vcaston,
@vcaston@zirk.us avatar

@elduvelle

Neither. 1/2 to 2/3 done. Well-developed idea, with funding for the closer.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@vcaston and do you mention the actual state of completeness of the different projects in the grant?

renebekkers,
@renebekkers@mastodon.social avatar

@elduvelle thanks for posting this question - so informative to see the diversity of responses! It's shocking to learn about the fraudulent practice #1. Grant proposals should fund new research, and identify work in progress as such. Mandatory public pre-registration could prevent #1.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@renebekkers Hmm, I’m not a fan of #1 either but if by mandatory pre-registration you mean doing it for any experiment that you’re about to start… that would just add a lot of work to already overwhelmed researchers and would probably reduce innovative and exploratory projects a lot. I’d be more in favour of giving more freedom to researchers, not less.

Maybe we should wonder why do people feel like they need to do #1? Maybe they think those mature projects are more likely to be funded, because the grant people are risk-adverse, and maybe that is the problem? Or maybe they don’t want to give out their best ideas for fear of someone stealing them? 🤔

In any case, the current grant system doesn’t seem optimal at all, and so wasteful…

LouZonca,

@elduvelle @renebekkers That's a good question, 1) sounds unethical but it also feels like if that's not what you do you never get funded because then feedback about your application is always something like "you did not prove that what you propose is going to work"...

renebekkers,
@renebekkers@mastodon.social avatar

@LouZonca @elduvelle perhaps in grant applications we should also include a budget for developing preliminary evidence for the next application

renebekkers,
@renebekkers@mastodon.social avatar

@elduvelle indeed a lot of time and money is wasted on grant proposals and their evaluation. For a competition I entered once the waste was 40% of the total amount granted. https://renebekkers.wordpress.com/2020/02/19/cut-the-crap-fund-the-research/
A system with a basic income for research would be better, or lotteries among those with eligible proposals.

steveroyle,
@steveroyle@biologists.social avatar

@elduvelle IMO 1 is unethical. I've heard it's the norm in other places, but here in the UK it's a no-no.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@steveroyle it looks like there are contradictory opinions on this: https://genomic.social/@IanSudbery/111811204311046174

steveroyle,
@steveroyle@biologists.social avatar

@elduvelle ha. I think he's saying two things: hiding completed work is not allowed and that UKRI is risk averse.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@steveroyle yes, you’re right.
The hiding part definitely feels unethical to me…

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@elduvelle I think 1) should be unethical. if you don't cite the work as being in progress it would be plagiarism no?

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@maartjeoostdijk maybe.. but how would you cite something that’s not published yet?

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@elduvelle I usually put it as 'in progress', definitely have done for grant applications, if its advanced enough for a pre-print, that would solve the issue.

albertcardona,
@albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @elduvelle

Often takes several years to run a project, with the final analysis and manuscript writing taking another 2 years. Sometimes it takes the whole duration of the grant to just run the analysis and send the paper out, maybe get it accepted on time for the final grant report.

Timelines in research are far more dilated than the span of grants. Until funders change this, they will be getting a mixture of new and almost done projects among the proposals.

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@albertcardona @elduvelle my issue with this is that if some people accept it's ok to hide a truth, because incentives, then the truthful people tend to lose out. No matter the reality of research, I think it's not ethical.

albertcardona,
@albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @elduvelle

Nobody hides the truth: how advanced a project really is becomes evident from the amount and quality of the preliminary data.

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@albertcardona @elduvelle 'hiding the fact that they’re almost completed' is the issue, not high quality preliminary data. Anyways, I'm happy I'm not alone thinking 1) is unethical, and I've seen it happen in a grant application in a way that I found unethical. but I can see opinions differ!

kofanchen,
@kofanchen@drosophila.social avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona @elduvelle my experience of applying are limited, but my mentors share a lot of applications with me: I can agree no one hide how much they are in the project, it is just funder tend to fund almost complete proposals for their regular calls, so you are forced to do that when you are able to to boost the chances. So it is like "hey we are almost done, do you want to piggyback?" Some specific calls however specifically want projects with NO preliminary data too.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@kofanchen That makes sense, as long as everyone is honest with each other!
I heard (don’t remember for which grant) that even though its guidelines said “no preliminary data required” your chances were still higher if you did add preliminary data… I really wish all these ‘hidden rules’ were not hidden… it is totally unfair to those who are not in the know for one reason or another
@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona

kofanchen,
@kofanchen@drosophila.social avatar

@elduvelle @maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona all you need is to talk to review panel/study group members that you know, they cannot review your grants ( in UK anyway) but they will have clear understanding what the panel are looking at and what are the red flags and sometimes the trend of amount of preliminary data needed to provide confidence of funder

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@kofanchen okay but… how do you know who’s in a grant panel? Isn’t this supposed to be confidential? @maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona

kofanchen,
@kofanchen@drosophila.social avatar

@elduvelle @maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona nope I think the panel member is published? At least it is common knowledge in my dept or research society

kofanchen,
@kofanchen@drosophila.social avatar
elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@kofanchen oh I see! Haha looks like @mattnolan is on there… so is it really OK to contact some committee members to ask them about the grant “philosophy”?
@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona

kofanchen,
@kofanchen@drosophila.social avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona @elduvelle to add, we still apply with limited preliminary data and hope for the best, but with understanding of the risk of not being funded. On the other hand, the almost complete projects were not necessarily having plan sail either, they can simply be viewed as "boring" or "pointless" by opinionated reviewers....

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar

@kofanchen @maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona hahahha, we can never win, can we?

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@albertcardona @elduvelle but yes, it's one element of many in research funding and other incentives that would need an overhaul to create a system where it's less beneficial to be unethical and conduct fraud.

RichardShaw,
@RichardShaw@mastodon.scot avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona @elduvelle

There comes a point where the only ethical option is to try to prioritise overhauling the system. For many people in UK academia this happened long ago.

However, to overhaul the system people need to survive. The result is people trying to balance between surviving with some degree of unethical behaviour and overhauling the system.

maartjeoostdijk,
@maartjeoostdijk@mstdn.social avatar

@RichardShaw @albertcardona @elduvelle I can see the reasoning. I've not seen obviously unethical behaviour going together with behaviour that helps overhaul the system, but it probably exists ;) I've seen people survive and do very well with (in my view) ethical behaviour. I've got zero experience with the UK system, and only with my field in other regions, so I'm just expressing opinions from my perspective.

RichardShaw,
@RichardShaw@mastodon.scot avatar

@maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona @elduvelle

The problem with unethical behaviour is that it's rarely obvious and generally lies in a murky grey area of competing challenges and compromises.

For most disciplines academic publishing is an obvious example. There is no way the current for profit publishing model represents reasonable value for money for tax payers. The most ethical option would be to refuse to engage with it, but for academic medical research that would be career suicide.

janbogar,
@janbogar@mastodonczech.cz avatar

@RichardShaw @maartjeoostdijk @albertcardona @elduvelle
I think this is one of those situations where responsibility is not on the individual, but on the society. The question "should I/should I not publish in it" is a false dilemma, there is a third option "don't fret over that, instead work with others to establish an alternative system, switch to it as soon as viable and achieve enough political power to replace the old system with it".

The inability of the academics to do that is absurd.

albertcardona, (edited )
@albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz avatar

@janbogar @RichardShaw @maartjeoostdijk @elduvelle

PeerJ, PLoS, eLife, EMBO Journal. We are trying.

Now the onus is on removing from evaluation criteria the "it's a <glamour journal> paper" shortcut, and disqualify anyone using that from membership in search committes or grant/dept./unit evaluation panels.

And to further drive the stake in by raising the issue with high-retraction rate journals, among which many glamour journals. Publishing in a glamour journal should sound suspicious, should require special dispensation to be included among evaluation criteria for recruitment/promotion/awards.

elduvelle,
@elduvelle@neuromatch.social avatar
albertcardona,
@albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz avatar

@elduvelle @janbogar @RichardShaw @maartjeoostdijk

I am doing it. The pushback is brutal, but I don't care: I have enough credentials. The excuses I hear are bufonic. It's quite easy to do actually, all it takes is asking, "have you read the paper?" in all circumstances.

cowboycatranch,
@cowboycatranch@mastodon.online avatar

@albertcardona @elduvelle @janbogar @RichardShaw @maartjeoostdijk I like how some labs have their publishing policy posted on their website. https://www.bunniklab.org/OTHER/index.html

jekely,
@jekely@biologists.social avatar

@cowboycatranch @albertcardona @elduvelle @janbogar @RichardShaw @maartjeoostdijk We also published the lab's publishing policy and new lab members have to agree. We have been publishing in non-corporate venues for many years now and I don't think that the career of people in the lab or my career suffered from this. Integrity, openness and the quality of our science is all that matter to us, not titles or magic tokens https://www.cos.uni-heidelberg.de/en/research-groups/gaspar-jekely/our-approach-to-publication

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