http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993168

Scientists exposed as sloppy reporters 

09:30 14 December 02 Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition 
A cunning statistical study has exposed scientists as sloppy reporters.
When they write up their work and cite other people's papers, most do not
bother to read the original.
The discovery was made by Mikhail Simkin and Vwani Roychowdhury of the
University of California, Los Angeles, who study the way information
spreads around different kinds of networks. 
They noticed in a citation database that misprints in references are
fairly common, and that a lot of the mistakes are identical. This
suggests that many scientists take short cuts, simply copying a reference
from someone else's paper rather than reading the original source.
To find out how common this is, Simkin and Roychowdhury looked at
citation data for a famous 1973 paper on the structure of two-dimensional
crystals. They found it had been cited in other papers 4300 times, with
196 citations containing misprints in the volume, page or year. But
despite the fact that a billion different versions of erroneous reference
are possible, they counted only 45. The most popular mistake appeared 78
times.
The pattern suggests that 45 scientists, who might well have read the
paper, made an error when they cited it. Then 151 others copied their
misprints without reading the original. So for at least 77 per cent of
the 196 misprinted citations, no one read the paper.

Still, you might think that the scientists who cited the paper correctly
had been more dutiful about reading it. Not so, say Simkin and
Roychowdhury. They modelled the way misprints spread as each new citer
finds a reference to the original source in any of the papers that
already cite it. 
The model shows that the distribution of misprinted citations of the 1973
paper could only have arisen if 78 per cent of all the citations,
including the correct ones, were "cut and pasted" from a secondary
source. Many of those who got it right were simply lucky.
The problem is not specific to this paper, the researchers say. Similar
patterns of errors cropped up in a dozen other high-profile papers they
studied. The trouble is that researchers trust other scientists to repeat
the key message of a paper correctly. This means that when misconceptions
take root, they spread like weeds.
Simkin and Roychowdhury promise that between them they read all the
references listed in their own paper including a book by Sigmund Freud.
Their advice to other scientists is "read before you cite". 

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