Retractions
Author(s)
Azoulay, Pierre; Furman, Jeffrey L.; Krieger, Joshua Lev; Murray, Fiona E.
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To what extent does “false science” impact the rate and direction of scientific change? We examine the impact of over 1,100 scientific retractions on the citation trajectories of articles that are related to retracted papers in intellectual space but were published prior to the retraction event. Following retraction and relative to carefully selected controls, related articles experience a lasting five to ten percent decline in the rate of citations received. This penalty is more severe when the retracted article involves fraud or misconduct, rather than honest mistakes. In addition, we find that the arrival rate of new articles and funding ows into these fields decrease after a retraction.
Date issued
2014-06Department
Sloan School of ManagementJournal
Review of Economics and Statistics
Publisher
MIT Press
Citation
Azoulay, Pierre, Jeffrey L. Furman, Joshua L. Krieger, and Fiona Murray. “Retractions.” Review of Economics and Statistics (June 24, 2014): 140624174807006.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0034-6535
1530-9142