 What advice would you give researchers to practice good science and avoid any kind of misconduct? So one thing is just to be honest with your work. So when you're doing the experiments, consider whether the results are true and valid and did the experiment work and did your controls work. Should an experiment be repeated? Is it properly analyzed? If those are all a guess, then you can use that data and consider it for part of your broader story. And then when it comes to publishing, it's really important to get the information for authors and ethics policies for whatever journal you're submitting to and reading those policies before you submit. Most journals follow similar guidelines, but everyone's a little bit different. And it's important to look at those guidelines well before you publish because as you prepare your paper, you want to make sure that your data is going into the right repositories. And your images are being prepared according to the journal standards, that your text is being written according to how the journal defines plagiarism and things like that. And authorship guidelines are also important as to how they define authorship and whether they define contributors and authors or what should go in the acknowledgment section. Also issues with conflicts of interest, how do you report your interactions with companies or other private organizations that may be paying for your research. All those things should be taken into consideration early as opposed to after publication when the journal writes to you saying that something was not fulfilled properly.