>"The international science journal *Nature *has named a data scientist [Achal 
Agrawal] in Raipur among 10 people who helped shape science in 2025, citing 
his work exposing scientific misconduct and research integrity breaches in 
higher education institutions."

>"Achal Agrawal, who runs the online platform India Research Watch (IRW), 
has flagged concerns that some universities have boosted their standing in 
the country’s annual academic rankings by inflating research output and 
citations through questionable means."

>"Many in academic circles believe the IRW played a role in nudging India’s 
higher education authorities to introduce earlier this year a penalty for 
retracted research papers in the National Institutional Ranking Framework 
(NIRF), the annual ranking exercise."

>"Agrawal’s efforts to raise awareness about research integrity breaches 
have 'placed him at the centre of the nation’s conversation about academic 
incentives', *Nature *said on Wednesday, featuring him among 10 people who 
'helped make amazing discoveries or brought attention to crucial issues' in 
2025."

>“'Many of us hope that the concerned regulatory bodies and academic 
institutions will appreciate and support this initiative so that the damage 
being inflicted on the country’s overall research quality because of high 
retractions and poor quality of papers can be reversed,' Lakhotia [Subhash, 
an emeritus professor of zoology at the Banaras Hindu University] said."
-----------------
By: G.S. Mudur
Published in: *The Telegraph* *Online*
Date: December 18, 2025
Source: 
https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/nature-names-raipur-data-scientist-achal-agrawal-for-exposing-research-misconduct-prnt/cid/2138366#goog_rewarded
His India Research Watch analysis flags retractions and citation inflation 
sparking debate on NIRF metrics and pushing regulators to tighten penalties
[image: image.png]
Achal Agarwal Credit: LinkedIn

New Delhi: The international science journal *Nature *has named a data 
scientist in Raipur among 10 people who helped shape science in 2025, 
citing his work exposing scientific misconduct and research integrity 
breaches in higher education institutions.

Achal Agrawal, who runs the online platform India Research Watch (IRW), has 
flagged concerns that some universities have boosted their standing in the 
country’s annual academic rankings by inflating research output and 
citations through questionable means.

His analysis of a global public database of retracted papers has shown that 
India’s retraction rate rose from 0.7 per 1,000 papers in 2014 to 1.4 in 
2021, peaked at 4.8 in 2022 and fell to 2.8 in 2024. Retractions signal 
that the published findings are unreliable because of either flawed or 
fraudulent research.

Many in academic circles believe the IRW played a role in nudging India’s 
higher education authorities to introduce earlier this year a penalty for 
retracted research papers in the National Institutional Ranking Framework 
(NIRF), the annual ranking exercise.

Agrawal’s efforts to raise awareness about research integrity breaches have 
“placed him at the centre of the nation’s conversation about academic 
incentives”, *Nature *said on Wednesday, featuring him among 10 people who 
“helped make amazing discoveries or brought attention to crucial issues” in 
2025.

After returning to India in 2018 with a PhD in mathematics from France’s 
University of Paris-Saclay, Agrawal wanted to work in education, though he 
was unsure how. Over the next four years, he moved across three private 
universities, served as a data scientist in a start-up, and taught children 
the basics of computers in a government school in an Uttarakhand village.

In one of the universities, he noticed what he describes as an enthusiasm 
to publish research papers at an unusually high pace. “Where I was in 
France, we were expected to publish at least one conference paper per year. 
Here, there appeared to be pressure to publish five papers per year,” 
Agrawal told *The Telegraph. He encountered both faculty and students 
engaging in what he considers questionable practices to raise their count 
of published research papers. *(emphasis original)

Agrawal set up the IRW in 2022 and began to analyse trends in research 
paper publications and the NIRF rankings. In 2024, Agrawal and a 
collaborator, Moumita Koley at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, 
flagged concerns that some universities are “possibly gaming the NIRF 
rankings” by manipulating research metrics, which are used to assess 
institutions.

Subhash Lakhotia, an emeritus professor of zoology at the Banaras Hindu 
University, who also serves as an adviser to the IRW, has described 
Agrawal’s efforts as a “bold initiative” to flag instances of breaches of 
research ethics and integrity.

“Many of us hope that the concerned regulatory bodies and academic 
institutions will appreciate and support this initiative so that the damage 
being inflicted on the country’s overall research quality because of high 
retractions and poor quality of papers can be reversed,” Lakhotia said.


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Goa-Research-Net" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/goa-research-net/716f7501-6abb-4021-8447-9ba2cb7b93f9n%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to