In a groundbreaking new study emerging from Linköping University in Sweden, researchers have uncovered striking disciplinary differences in attitudes toward research ethics, challenging the notion that a uniform approach to ethical standards across all scientific fields is feasible. The comprehensive survey, which engaged over 11,000 active researchers across diverse disciplines, draws a detailed map of how perceptions regarding questionable research practices diverge significantly between medical, natural, social sciences, and humanities realms. These findings promise to ignite a broader dialogue on tailoring ethical frameworks to meet the unique demands and traditions of different fields.
This expansive survey employed a seven-point scale to measure researchers’ stances on a spectrum of misconduct—ranging from clear-cut scientific fraud such as fabricating data or plagiarism to the more nebulous grey zones of research conduct. The data reveals an unequivocal consensus against overt cheating, with all disciplines condemning fraud and plagiarism. Yet when it comes to subtler questionable behaviors—those that may flirt with ethical boundaries but lack universal condemnation—significant variation surfaces, exposing underlying philosophical and methodological differences inherent to each research tradition.
Among the most striking contrasts is the markedly stringent ethical position held by medical researchers. Their judgments on questionable practices are considerably more severe, especially regarding actions that demonstrate disrespect towards research participants or society at large. This rigor in medical ethics is not just theoretical; it reflects long-standing formalized ethical codes and regulatory oversight designed to protect human subjects, given the direct impact medical research can have on patient health and welfare.
Paradoxically, despite this pronounced ethical strictness, previous empirical research contextualized by this study points to higher incidences of actual research misconduct within the medical community compared to other fields. Notably, medicine exhibits the highest retraction rates of publications due to ethical violations, suggesting a potentially complex relationship between heightened ethical expectations and compliance in practice. This tension highlights the need to explore not only attitudes but also systemic pressures and cultural factors that may drive discrepancies between ideal ethical behavior and real-world actions.
Contrasting sharply with the medical sphere, social science and humanities researchers demonstrate relatively more permissive attitudes, particularly on matters linked to the contemporary movement of open science. Open science practices, which emphasize transparency through data sharing and pre-registration of study protocols, are embraced with some reluctance in these disciplines. Concerns around participant privacy, confidentiality, and the unique nature of qualitative data, such as interview transcripts and field notes, often justify more cautious approaches to openness, illustrating how one-size-fits-all principles may not be practical or ethical.
The cultural and methodological traditions embedded within each discipline serve as powerful explanatory variables for these differences. While medicine’s ethics framework has long been influenced by bioethics and strict governance, social sciences and humanities often navigate ethical terrains that necessitate balancing transparency with respecting the contextual and sensitive nature of human subjects. This dynamic interplay between ethical ideals and discipline-specific realities underscores the importance of contextual ethical deliberations, rather than rigid universalism.
Beyond disciplinary distinctions, the study also surveyed members of Swedish research ethics committees, whose judgments were consistently more rigorous than those of the average researcher, irrespective of their field of review. This suggests that gatekeepers of research oversight are guided by more conservative standards, potentially reflecting their dual role in safeguarding public trust and enforcing institutional and legal mandates. This divergence raises critical questions about the alignment between researchers’ ethical perspectives and regulatory expectations, illuminating challenges in designing research ethics governance that is both effective and sensitive to disciplinary nuances.
However, the greatest ethical variation appeared not between different fields but among individuals within the same academic community. Even in medicine, often seen as the most ethically stringent domain, researchers displayed significant heterogeneity in their assessments of questionable research practices. This highlights how personal moral frameworks, shaped by individual experiences, values, and perhaps training, interact with disciplinary norms to produce complex ethical landscapes. It calls attention to the pivotal role of cultivating ethical reflexivity and dialogue at the individual level.
Assistant Professor Lina Koppel from the Jedilab interdisciplinary research group at Linköping University, one of the study’s lead authors, emphasizes this point: disciplinary affiliation matters, but individual moral judgment remains a powerful factor in how questionable research is assessed. This insight underscores an imperative for ethics education that not only addresses field-specific issues but also encourages personal moral development and critical reflection throughout a researcher’s career.
The study’s technical rigor and breadth—the largest of its kind in Sweden—allow for nuanced analysis of ethical attitudes, integrating quantitative survey data with qualitative insights. Its methodology entailed detailed questionnaire design tailored to capture subtle gradations of ethical acceptance, highlighting a methodologically innovative approach to exploring what often remains a subjective and sensitive topic within academia.
The implications of these findings ripple through policy circles, prompting a reevaluation of whether current research ethics systems, often modeled on biomedical ethics principles, are adequate for all scientific disciplines. Should ethical oversight be calibrated differently for the humanities and social sciences? To what extent should contextual sensitivity influence the enforcement of open science mandates or data sharing protocols? This research encourages stakeholders, from institutional review boards to policymakers, to consider adaptive, context-aware ethical frameworks that respect disciplinary diversity without compromising integrity.
Emerging increasingly from scientific communities worldwide is a shared concern about research credibility and integrity amidst high-profile scandals and public scrutiny. Linköping University’s study contributes meaningfully to this conversation, providing evidence-based insights that highlight the complexity of ethical governance in science. As different fields grapple with their own challenges of transparency, participant protection, and honesty, this work pushes for a dialogue that bridges disciplinary divides while honoring their unique ethical contours.
By shedding light on the divergent ethical landscapes across science, this study encourages a future where research governance is not only universally principled but also pragmatically pluralistic. Such an approach would respect disciplinary traditions, individual moral agency, and the overarching imperative to maintain public trust in science. Ultimately, these findings pave the way for more sophisticated, inclusive debates about what good research conduct means in a diverse and evolving scientific ecosystem.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Is research ethics discipline-specific? A survey of researchers’ and ethics reviewers’ views on research misconduct and questionable practices
News Publication Date: 20-Feb-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2026.105435
References: Research Policy (Journal)
Image Credits: Marcus Pettersson
Keywords: research ethics, disciplinary differences, medical research ethics, social sciences, humanities, open science, research misconduct, questionable research practices, ethical attitudes, research integrity, ethics committees, research culture

