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Its report found what it called "a pervasive attitude of disregard within the (lab)" for commonly accepted scientific practices. It also said there were so many problems -- and over so many years -- that the review board members "can only conclude that they were the result of intentional acts of data falsification and fabrication, designed to deceive." Some examples included several cases in which data was digitally altered; data from one experiment was used to justify findings in another; and controls from one experiment were used to denote another experiment's controls, which are the unchanged factors against which experiments are compared. Austin, the UConn health affairs vice president, said they are "deeply disappointed by the flagrant disregard" for UConn's conduct codes, but grateful that the anonymous tipster notified authorities. "The abuses in one lab do not reflect the overall performance of the Health Center's biomedical research enterprise, which continues to pursue advances in treatments and cures with the utmost of integrity," Austin said. "We demand full compliance with all research standards and policies by our faculty and staff." The disclosure comes less than a week after Connecticut authorities finalized an agreement with a Maine-based lab to build a genomic research facility at the UConn Health Center in Farmington as part of a broader plan to expand the medical and dental schools and boost research. Das' research pre-dates those plans by several years, and is not directly part of the genomic research program.
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