|
Volumn , Issue , 2005, Pages
|
Many scientists admit to misconduct: degrees of deception vary in poll; researchers say findings could hurt the field.
a
a
NONE
|
Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
|
Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
EMPIRICAL APPROACH;
ETHICS;
HUMAN;
MEDICAL RESEARCH;
PERSONNEL;
POPULAR APPROACH/SOURCE;
QUESTIONNAIRE;
SCIENTIFIC MISCONDUCT;
STATISTICS;
UNITED STATES;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
EMPIRICAL APPROACH;
POPULAR APPROACH/SOURCE;
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH;
HUMANS;
QUESTIONNAIRES;
RESEARCH PERSONNEL;
SCIENTIFIC MISCONDUCT;
UNITED STATES;
|
EID: 22844448585
PISSN: 01908286
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (2)
|
References (0)
|