University of Michigan Ross School of Business
RCRS
Human subjects research: human beings are your research subjects and may be directly affected by the research.
If it is human subjects research: need additional oversight of your research by the Institutional Review board (IRB).
Not human subjects research:
Publicly available data
Data that cannot ever be re-identified (crosswalk to identifying information has been destroyed)
Data that the researcher has no way to re-identify, including through tricky means
Even without direct identifiers, data that includes very detailed information such as exact date of birth, zip code of residence, etc, may be considered human subjects research.
If your data falls in the above categories, you do not need the IRB to approve your project.
Human subjects research:
Data sets with any direct identifying information (such as names, address, social security number).
Data with enough detailed information that subjects can be re-identified.
If you are conducting human subjects research, you will need to get IRB approval, which you can submit via eresearch.umich.edu
Human subjects research:
Often, if data are identifiable, consent from participants is required. However, this is often infeasible. The IRB may grant a waiver of informed consent if the researcher can demonstrate that :
How can we demonstrate this?
Privacy: is the control over the extent, timing, and circumstances of sharing oneself (physically, behaviorally, or intellectually) with others.
Confidentiality: pertains to the treatment of information that an individual has disclosed in a relationship of trust and with the expectation that it will not be divulged to others without permission in ways that are inconsistent with the understanding of the original disclosure.
Many data providers will provide you data if you sign a data use agreement, or a legal contract governing the use of the data and your scope for publishing with the data.
It is important to submit these to the UM Office of Research and Sponsored Projects for review, so that they receive an institutional signature.
Why?
Data use agreements often require specific data security measures.
The Ross office of technology can help with this.
Researchers also have an obligation to the scientific community and to the public to present results honestly and accurately.
Your number one asset as a researcher is your reputation for doing honest and accurate research.
In 2014, bombshell article published in Science showed that contact with gay political canvassers led people to have more tolerant views on gay marriage.
The junior author, a PhD student in political science, was a star on the market and secured an assistant professor position at Princeton.
Other political scientists were impressed, and wanted to conduct follow up work.
Upon investigating--they discovered the original authors had falsified the data.
What happened?
Paper was retracted from Science
Junior scholar's job offer at Princeton was rescinded, ended up leaving academia entirely
National news coverage of the event
In my experience, every interesting paper gets replicated, no exceptions.
Fabricating data is extreme. But many data analysis practices fall into an ethical gray zone which may amount to data falsification.
Data falsification: manipulating data to give a false impression of the results. Could be:
In my experience you are always better off avoiding doing anything that does not stand up to scrutiny. This isn't the 90s anymore! Papers get replicated and if your result is shaky, this will get uncovered.
Assume your paper will be replicated. This is a good thing!
Your work will have more influence if it is easy to replicate.
Many journals now requiring this as a condition of publication.
Make it easy to replicate by:
Federal Statistical Research Data Center:
Firm- and establishment-level data: Longitudinal Business Data
-Firm and establishment level data for the entire non-farm private sector in the United States (earnings, employment, openings and closings)
Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics: Quarterly earnings for individuals with UI-covered wages (~90% private employment), can track employees across firms/establishments
Numident-All deaths to SSN holders in the United States, linked to all Census data, including Census surveys (detailed info on education, occupation, earnings, etc.)
Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation:
Private and public health insurance claims for millions of beneficiaries
All hospitalization/ED visits for large number of states
University of Michigan EHR records
Researchers cannot influence scientific progress, the public, policy makers or the business world without credibility.
Study participants and companies will not agree to share data if they are worried researchers will disrespect their privacy or confidentiality.
We all have a responsibility to conduct data analysis ethically and minimize participant risks.