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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsStanford is investigating its president over allegations of research misconduct
Stanford University has opened an investigation into its president, Marc Tessier-Lavigne, a renowned neuroscientist and former biotech executive, for research misconduct after experts alleged papers on which he was an author included altered images, the university confirmed.
The universitys board will oversee the investigation.
The revelations followed a report Tuesday in the Stanford Daily that the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) Journal was reviewing a 2008 paper co-authored by Tessier-Lavigne. The Dailys story outlines how experts including Elisabeth Bik, a scientific integrity expert who has investigated image manipulation in scientific papers widely, raised concerns about a total of four papers that Tessier-Lavigne co-authored between 2001 to 2008, including two on which he was the senior author.
The university will assess the allegations presented in the Stanford Daily, consistent with its normal rigorous approach by which allegations of research misconduct are reviewed and investigated, the university said in a statement.
Tessier-Lavigne gained renown in biotech circles as a research executive at Genentech starting in 2003, a golden period at the company. He left Genentech in 2011 to become president of Rockefeller University, and in 2016 became president of Stanford. Tessier-Lavigne is also a co-founder of Bay Area-based Denali Therapeutics, which is developing medicines for neurodegenerative disorders. He is on the board both at Denali and at Regeneron, and previously was on the boards of Pfizer, Agios Pharmaceuticals, and Juno Therapeutics, according to his resume.
https://www.statnews.com/2022/11/30/stanford-tessier-lavigne-research-misconduct/
intrepidity
(7,294 posts)At his level, he may have never even seen the actual original blots, but rather just slides by the researcher who did the work and presented at a lab meeting. I doubt there's any here there.
The university also told the Daily that Tessier-Lavigne was notified about the errors in some of his papers in late 2015, and that he in turn informed the journals. None of the papers has been corrected.
On Wednesday, Holden Thorp, the editor-in-chief of the Science journals, acknowledged that Tessier-Lavigne had reported the issues with the images to the journal and prepared Errata for the two papers published in Science. However, Thorp said in a statement, due to an error on our part, Science never posted these Errata. We regret this error, apologize to the scientific community, and will be sharing our next steps as they relate to these two papers as soon as possible.