Jan 22, 2021

Joint Spring MOS-AK, SB-MOS and IEEE EDS MQ

Joint Spring MOS-AK Workshop and Symposium on Schottky Barrier MOS (SB-MOS) Devices
with IEEE EDS Mini-Colloquium on “Non-Conventional Devices and Technologies”
September 29 to October 1, 2020
THM Giessen (Germany)
—by Mike Schwarz— The Joint Spring MOS-AK Workshop and Symposium on Schottky Barrier MOS (SB-MOS) devices with IEEE EDS Mini-Colloquium on “Non-conventional Devices and Technologies” was held from September 29 to October 1, 2020. While it was initially planned for spring at THM—University of Applied Sciences in Giessen (Germany), it was shifted to the early autumn due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, finally the local organizers of NanoP Competence Center for Nanotechnology and Photonics of THM decided to move it to Zoom and perform it virtually. It was sponsored by THM, the EDS Germany Chapter, the IEEE Young Professionals Germany Affinity Group, and the AdMOS company. The event was attended by 69 IEEE members and 115 non IEEE members (guests) from 25 countries during the three days [read more...]

#Samsung Foundry Certifies Analog #FastSPICE Platform from #Siemens



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January 22, 2021 at 10:02AM
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Jan 21, 2021

Jan 20, 2021

[paper] Publish or be ethical?

Mariola Paruzel-Czachura, Lidia Baran, Zbigniew Spendel 
Publish or be ethical? Publishing pressure and scientific misconduct in research 
First Published CC BY-NC 4.0 Dec. 18, 2020 
SAGE Journals: Research Ethics (2020) 
DOI: 10.1177/1747016120980562 

* Institute of Psychology, University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland

Abstract: The paper reports two studies exploring the relationship between scholars’ self-reported publication pressure and their self-reported scientific misconduct in research. In Study 1 the participants (N = 423) were scholars representing various disciplines from one big university in Poland. In Study 2 the participants (N = 31) were exclusively members of the management, such as dean, director, etc. from the same university. In Study 1 the most common reported form of scientific misconduct was honorary authorship. The majority of researchers (71%) reported that they had not violated ethical standards in the past; 3% admitted to scientific misconduct; 51% reported being were aware of colleagues’ scientific misconduct. A small positive correlation between perceived publication pressure and intention to engage in scientific misconduct in the future was found. In Study 2 more than half of the management (52%) reported being aware of researchers’ dishonest practices, the most frequent one of these being honorary authorship. As many as 71% of the participants report observing publication pressure in their subordinates. The primary conclusions are: (1) most scholars are convinced of their morality and predict that they will behave morally in the future; (2) scientific misconduct, particularly minor offenses such as honorary authorship, is frequently observed both by researchers (particularly in their colleagues) and by their managers; (3) researchers experiencing publication pressure report a willingness to engage in scientific misconduct in the future.
Fig: Ways in which respondents have infringed ethical principles

Founding: The current research was supported by Miniatura1 2017/01/X/HS6/01332 from the National Science Centre (NCN, Poland) to Mariola Paruzel-Czachura. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of them authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Center. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Tracking a variety of #semi, which are affected by COVID-19. (Image source: Yole) https://t.co/oeNFCdXZTj https://t.co/8wV4D8PQR3


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January 20, 2021 at 10:58AM
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