Reflexive Behaviour: How publication pressure affects research quality in Astronomy
Julia Heuritsch

TL;DR
This study investigates how publication pressure influences astronomers' research behavior and misconduct, revealing significant links between pressure, perceived justice, and research quality, and suggests policy changes to improve scientific integrity.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on the impact of publication pressure on misconduct and research quality in astronomy, highlighting the need for policy reforms.
Findings
Publication pressure explains 19% of misconduct variance.
Misconduct perception affects 7-13% of justice and overcommitment perceptions.
Questionable research practices significantly harm research quality.
Abstract
Reflexive metrics is a branch of science studies which explores how the demand for accountability and performance measurement in science has shaped the research culture in recent decades. Hypercompetition and publication pressure are part of this neoliberal culture. How do scientists respond to these pressures? Studies on research integrity and organizational culture suggest that people who feel treated unfairly by their institution are more likely to engage in deviant behaviour, such as scientific misconduct. By building up on reflexive metrics, combined with studies on the influence of organisational culture on research integrity, this study reflects on the research behaviour of astronomers: 1) To what extent is research (mis-)behaviour reflexive, i.e. dependent on perceptions of publication pressure and distributive & organisational justice? 2) What impact does scientific misconduct…
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