The top 2 percent of the world’s first 2 percent of the world’s Stanford Elsevier Industrial-long list is that 2,322 elite researchers with 2,322 America have been retreated in their lives compared to 877 best scientists affiliated with China.
The top five were Britain, 430 researchers retreated with documents, Japan (362) and Germany (336).
The authors make it clear that the retreatment is increasingly common, but that “a small minority is still responsible for published documents” and that a paper can be withdrawn for a variety of reasons.
“Every retreat is not a sign of misconduct,” told Nature News that John Ionitis, an epidemic at Stanford University, who led the study, told Nature on January 31.
“But, in all the science fields, it is important that people who are very influential in science have a bird’s eye.”
Data comes from a retreat watch database, a base that focuses on withdrawal and registering educational papers around the world. It was launched in August 2010, created and maintained by the scientific monitoring system with retreat surveillance.
As of August 15 last year, the database had more than 55,000 retreating records.