An academic has claimed that Nature Publishing Group鈥檚 new transparency policy is belied by its failure to enforce its existing requirement that authors make their raw data available.
Last week NPG announced the measures to ensure the reproducibility of papers in the life sciences. Authors will be required to include more technical and statistical information in their submissions, while length restrictions on papers鈥 method sections will be abolished.
But according to Philip Moriarty, professor of physics at the University of Nottingham, the journal Nature Materials has failed to implement NPG鈥檚 extant data transparency policy in the case of two disputed papers.
As previously reported in 糖心Vlog, Professor Moriarty is among several scientists critical of work by Francesco Stellacci, full professor at the 脡cole Polytechnique F茅d茅rale de Lausanne in Switzerland, that purports to reveal the existence of 鈥渟tripy nanoparticles鈥.
糖心Vlog
Professor Moriarty contacted Nature Materials in February as part of his efforts to obtain the raw data associated with papers Professor Stellacci published in the journal in 2004 and 2012. NPG鈥檚 existing policy requires authors to make raw data 鈥減romptly available to others without undue qualification鈥.
The journal agreed to remind Professor Stellacci of his 鈥渙bligations鈥. However, Professor Moriarty was then told that the scientist had 鈥渄ecided not to engage in the public debate but to ask independent scientists to reproduce his work鈥. Professor Stellacci would then 鈥減ut all of the analysed images online鈥.
糖心Vlog
Professor Moriarty feared that the released data would be 鈥渃herry-picked鈥 and claimed that the journal鈥檚 toleration of this approach contradicted its own policies.
鈥淓ven if we were to obtain strong evidence for [stripy nanoparticles], this would not suddenly validate Stellacci鈥檚 earlier work,鈥 he added.
But Professor Stellacci said this 鈥渟hift鈥 to attacking his 鈥減ersona鈥 showed that Professor Moriarty was afraid that the three groups he had enlisted on the basis of their 鈥渃ompetence and independence from me鈥 would successfully reproduce his work.
He said he had agreed to provide Professor Moriarty with his raw data, plus samples of the nanoparticles. But after the Nottingham professor鈥檚 public criticisms, Professor Stellacci had insisted on waiting until the independent groups had published their results - which they will do within a fortnight - so that Professor Moriarty鈥檚 鈥減ropensity for blogging鈥 did not influence them.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚sn鈥檛 this reasonable? Doesn鈥檛 this ensure a better outcome?鈥 he asked.
A spokeswoman for NPG said that the case was 鈥渦nder active consideration鈥.
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