Hi ECOLOGers,

Because of several recent high-profile news stories from various fields, I
have became interested in how often researchers are discouraged from
publishing their results. I am a PhD student and this doesn't draw from my
own experience, which has been very positive and well-supported, but I'm
curious about how we stack up to other fields.

I've made is a short survey for researchers about whether they have ever
been pressured to not publish data or results. So far I have gotten a number
of interesting responses mainly from young researchers who come from similar
institutions to my own. This brings up issues of how young researchers can
learn to deal with these situations when there are major power differentials
between the two sides in a discussion.

However, the demographic I've reached so far might lead me to a different
interpretation of the results than is more generally correct! So I'd like
hear from the broader community, including people who have worked in
research for different lengths of time and at different types of institutions.

I'm not planning to publish the results as a manuscript, unless the results
are particularly fascinating in which case I would consider writing a letter
to the editor or a short note. Instead, I plan to write a blog post about
the results and share them. I hope this generates some discussion within the
community. There's a space at the end of the survey to provide your email
address if you'd like to see the results when I write them up.

You can access the survey, which will take less than 5 minutes, here:
http://goo.gl/forms/PXEOC4BTkh Because of response bias, it would be great
if people who have never encountered this situation would also take the survey.

Thanks so much for your time,

Chelsea Little
PhD student in Ecology
University of Zurich
Eawag, the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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