A Stanford University review of allegations about research papers authored by聽the university鈥檚 president, Marc Tessier-Lavigne, is聽stretching through a聽fourth month with still-mounting allegations, sharpening denials and little idea how long it聽will distract one of聽the world鈥檚 leading research institutions.
The case began when the student newspaper, The Stanford Daily, reported that several by Dr Tessier-Lavigne, a聽Canadian-born neuroscientist, allegedly contained instances of聽image manipulation affecting their findings. That touched off an聽internal review within the university.
of later expanded to include three additional papers in Science and Cell where Dr Tessier-Lavigne was the senior author, and again more recently with new allegations involving a paper in Nature with implications for treating brain degeneration in Alzheimer鈥檚 patients.
Dr Tessier-Lavigne has stayed in the presidency while , and he made a strong response to the most recent set of charges, related to the Nature paper while he was working at the biotechnology company Genentech.
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鈥淟et me reiterate that I am confident a full airing of the facts will vindicate my position,鈥 the president said in the latest in a series of intermittent he has been making about the case.
An official Stanford review of the matter is being conducted by a committee formed by the university鈥檚 trustees. The panel the newly reported allegations to its review, and it can offer no estimate of when it will finish its work, a spokesman said.
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One group of seven Stanford professors published a letter in the student newspaper not to rush to judgement, noting the allegations have created a high-stakes case with a complex set of considerations over what responsibilities can be assigned to any one person in the drafting of research articles and the creation of images depicting data findings.
One of the signatories to that letter, William Newsome, a professor of neurobiology, acknowledged hearing 鈥渁 great deal of private conversation鈥 on campus, with faculty and students 鈥渁ll quite concerned about the allegations鈥.
But Professor Newsome said he was confident the issue would be resolved through a careful assessment of the facts. 鈥淪tanford is strong enough to resist anonymous pressure and make considered decisions on the basis of actual evidence,鈥 he told 探花视频. 鈥淚t is worth taking a few months to get this right.鈥
The chair of the Stanford faculty senate, Kenneth Schultz, a professor of political science, said he would not discuss a report that several senate colleagues had expressed to him their concern about the ability of Dr Tessier-Lavigne to keep leading Stanford under the circumstances.
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One of Stanford's more prominent voices, John Ioannidis, a professor of medicine renowned for his investigations of accuracy in scientific research, offered a mixed assessment. Professor Ioannidis said the new allegations about work at Genentech 鈥渁re very serious, and totally transparent documentation or rebuttal is needed鈥. He also expressed disappointment that Dr Tessier-Lavigne had declined requests from The Stanford Daily among others to discuss its findings, and that the university had failed to congratulate a student newspaper reporter, Theo Baker, a prestigious George Polk Award for his investigative work on the case.
But 鈥渦nless/until an official investigation verdict proves otherwise, I continue to consider MTL a giant in science鈥, Professor Ioannidis said, using a common abbreviation for the president鈥檚 name.
Nature has not decided whether to retract the Genentech article. 鈥淲e are carefully considering concerns regarding this paper,鈥 a spokesperson for the journal said.
Kevin McClure, an associate professor of higher education at University of North Carolina at Wilmington, said the loss of community confidence and harm to the president鈥檚 fundraising capabilities may start proving definitive. 鈥淪ometimes the public relations spectacle is enough for someone to say they need to step aside so that the institution isn鈥檛 constantly answering questions about it,鈥 Professor McClure said.
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John Thelin, a research professor emeritus of the history of higher education and public policy at the University of Kentucky, said that beyond the investigation, the 鈥渉arder question the president has to face is whether he has retained his credibility and trust鈥.
He added: 鈥淲hether fair or unfair, whether proven wrong or not, if he is then stymied in his leading and credibility, he may out of exhaustion find it best to resign.鈥
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