student holding centrifuge tubes

Oversight Committees

Investigators must submit a protocol for review and receive approval from the appropriate committee before initiating any such research.

Conflicts of Interest

Faculty and staff are required to disclose annually any significant financial conflicts of interest that would reasonably appear to affect the independence of their research. The vice president for research and economic development examines such disclosures to determine if a conflict exists, and if so, how it can be managed, reduced or eliminated.

Researchers who apply for or are awarded funding by an agency of the U.S. Public Health Service are required to disclose any relevant financial conflicts of interest via a separate form and receive training in U.S. Public Health Service financial conflicts of interest through Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative every four years.

Conflicts of Interest

Export Compliance and Control

Research whose results are not ordinarily published and shared broadly in the scientific community may be subject to export control laws (federal regulations that govern the conditions under which certain information, technologies and commodities can be transmitted overseas to anyone, including U.S. citizens, or to a foreign national on U.S. soil). Oversight and support for such research are provided by the System Export Control Program.

Export Compliance

Unmanned Aerial Systems

The use of unmanned aerial systems (a.k.a. drones) on university-owned property is regulated by South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã Board of Regents and SDSU policy. Operators may request permission for indoor use, outdoor use on campus (highly restricted) and outdoor use at the Research Park at SDSU. Application forms must be accompanied by proof of operator and observer training.

Unmanned Aerial Systems/Drone Information

Training Requirements

All faculty, staff and students involved in research using human subjects, à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã subjects or biohazardous materials must first complete the appropriate online training offered by the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative and pass all applicable modules. For more information, see the training FAQs. For those working in the vivarium (à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã research wing), please see the website for further training requirements.

All students and postdoctoral researchers working in activities supported by the National Science Foundation or the National Institutes of Health, and staff working on U.S. Department of Agriculture-funded research, must receive training in the responsible conduct of research. Such training may be acquired through the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative, the university course GSR 601 (research regulations compliance) or other such programming provided by the program director of research integrity and compliance.

Training (Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative) FAQs

Reporting Research Misconduct

If you suspect research misconduct (fabrication, falsification or plagiarism) or have concerns about à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã welfare, human subject protection or biosafety, please report it or contact the program director of research integrity and compliance.

To report a research concern
  • Toll-free hotline: 844-880-0004

The online report and toll-free hotline are both provided by Lighthouse Reports. You may choose to remain anonymous when providing information.

To schedule a confidential consultation or to speak to SDSU's program director of research integrity and compliance

Please contact:

Program director of research integrity and compliance
- Phone: 605-688-5642 
- Office: Morrill Hall 200C

Your identity will remain confidential, and you can make a report without fear of retaliation.

Contact for more information