• A recent issue of Science has an article discussing an issue that has been a constant headache for anyone involved with any kind of modeling in drug discovery - the lack of reproducibility in computational science. (fieldofscience.com)
  • One of the signs of pseudoscience is a lack of reproducibility in their experiments. (rationalwiki.org)
  • Another point often related to the lack of reproducibility in biomedical research is the biased use of statistical models. (bvsalud.org)
  • Clinical psychology journals could improve transparency and reproducibility, as well as reduce bias, by requiring complete prospective trial registration for publication and by including trial registration numbers in all reports of RCTs. (rand.org)
  • New reporting standards for Nature journal authors are intended to improve transparency and reproducibility. (nature.com)
  • To cope with the large variety of software used and to develop standards for replicability, joint efforts of journals could ensure each empirical study is published with data, code, and instructions on how to use them together. (repec.org)
  • The American Journal of Political Science sets an example by having all empirical studies externally check for replicability prior to publication. (repec.org)
  • What is Reproducibility and Replicability? (libguides.com)
  • Reproducibility and Replicability have meant different things to different disciplines. (libguides.com)
  • While most individuals are aware that disciplines have identified issues in the areas of reproducibility and replicability, the disciplines themselves have not been in agreement regarding the common description and definition of these two terms. (libguides.com)
  • For a brief discussion of this topic, please see: Plesser, Hans E. ' Reproducibility vs. Replicability: A Brief History of a Confused Terminology,' in Frontiers of Neuroinformatics, 18 January 2018. (libguides.com)
  • Reproducibility and replicability do not refer to one standard set of guidelines but rather are set through individual research communities and organizational standards. (libguides.com)
  • In an extension of the Kitzes' introduction, the goals of reproducibility and replicability take " the basic principles of the scientific method that you learned at the lab bench and translate them to your laptop. (libguides.com)
  • In this chapter, we will use "reproducibility" and "replicability" interchangeably, indicating that a similar result is obtained when collecting new data under conditions similar to those in the original study. (bvsalud.org)
  • Ensuring systematic attention to reporting and transparency is only a small step toward solving the issues of reproducibility that have been highlighted across the life sciences. (nature.com)
  • Journals select which of the eight transparency standards they wish to implement and select a level of implementation for each. (oercommons.org)
  • It will allow researchers, journals, universities, funders, teachers, journalists, and the general public to ensure:- Transparency: Ensure research meets minimum transparency standards appropriate to the article type and employed methodologies. (oercommons.org)
  • Sharing data in addition to published results increases transparency and reproducibility in research. (umd.edu)
  • 1 In spite of this, articles continue to pass through editorial and peer review processes and are published with critical aspects of their methods and results missing or inadequately described. (cmaj.ca)
  • Subjects and methods: Reproducibility mean and maximal work without correction of gravity was first assessed in 14 neuromuscular patients, at 10°/s. (iospress.com)
  • They, along with experts , and even journals , have pushed for the preregistration of studies so that the methods of research are more transparent and the analyses are free of bias or alteration. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • To Smaldino, the selection pressures in science have favored less-than-ideal research: "As long as things like publication quantity, and publishing flashy results in fancy journals are incentivized, and people who can do that are rewarded … they'll be successful, and pass on their successful methods to others. (vox.com)
  • Thus, the acceptance of an article, particularly in journals that are very selective for high-impact findings, ends up depending not only on the research's methods but also on its results. (bvsalud.org)
  • The full description of methods is available in the Global Tuberculosis Report 2013 and the data sets are available from the WHO global TB database ( www.who.int/tb/country/en/ ). (who.int)
  • Computational Linguistics in the Netherlands Journal. (vu.nl)
  • For computational experiments, this means that an independent group can obtain the same result using the author's own artifacts. (libguides.com)
  • How easy would it be to reproduce the results of a computational biology paper? (biomedcentral.com)
  • Such a number is surprising, given the theoretical reproducibility of computational research and given Bourne was attempting to reproduce work done in his own lab. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Conclusions This is the first report addressing quality and reproducibility of WA in a large sample. (bmj.com)
  • The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. (cdc.gov)
  • Langen G, Lohr C, Ueberschär O, Behringer M (2022) Reproducibility of knee extensor and flexor contraction velocity in healthy men and women assessed using tensiomyography: A study protocol. (plos.org)
  • article{b48a31ce-6d36-499d-a604-bf4cf7f77ee1, abstract = {{We present a systematic comparison of the results from our non-equilibrium Green's function formalism with a large number of AlGaAs-GaAs terahertz quantum cascade lasers previously published in the literature. (lu.se)
  • ABSTRACT The diagnosis of diabetes mellitus by the available criteria is controversial and relies heavily on fasting glucose results. (who.int)
  • Scientific reproducibility has been at the forefront of many news stories and there exist numerous initiatives to help address this problem. (researchgate.net)
  • Scientific efficiency and reproducibility depend upon a research-wide improvement of this substantial problem in science today. (researchgate.net)
  • People all over have started to question the legitimacy of scientific studies that have been published in esteemed journals. (wikipedia.org)
  • Without a stronger emphasis on reproducibility, the published datasets may not be sufficient to confirm published results and the scientific process of self-correction is at risk. (intarch.ac.uk)
  • Editor's Choice articles are based on recommendations by the scientific editors of MDPI journals from around the world. (mdpi.com)
  • Reproducibility is a key part of the scientific method and refers to the possibility of reproducing an experimental result by a third party following the same procedures as the original experimenter. (rationalwiki.org)
  • Scientific experiments can also lack reproducibility, [2] but this just indicates either that the original experiment was flawed, that a better understanding of the problem is needed, or it is something that for its nature happens very often. (rationalwiki.org)
  • The process of verification and correction of published science, however, occurs in a non systematic way, which means that reproducibility is not guaranteed by scientific publication in its current format. (bvsalud.org)
  • It should be noted that the reproducibility of a scientific finding can be defined in many ways, and that there is no consensus on the use of the terms "reproducible" and "replicable" (1,2). (bvsalud.org)
  • The main cause attributed to the observations described above is a publication and incentive system that rewards the impact and novelty of scientific findings, but does not systematically assess their reproducibility, which is rarely considered in the evaluation of researchers (14,15). (bvsalud.org)
  • This leads to a literature that is full of positive and impacting results, but usually at the expense of selective or biased analyses and inflated effects, which distort our perception of the scientific problems under study (16). (bvsalud.org)
  • Irreproducible 'Scientific' Results - Medscape - Mar 06, 2018. (medscape.com)
  • My lab has developed a protocol to easily assess the specificity of antibodies-and hopefully stem some of the reproducibility crisis. (the-scientist.com)
  • The aims of the study were to assess the reproducibility and validity of very weak knee flexors and extensors muscle strength with a new isokinetic evaluation procedure. (iospress.com)
  • Bland-Altman plots and coefficients of variation (CV) were used to assess the reproducibility of OGSE and μA metrics. (bepress.com)
  • To assess inter-examiner reproducibility in the detection of 20 occlusal caries in permanent teeth using three diagnostic codes and criteria: WHO (1997), Nyvad and ICDAS-II. (bvsalud.org)
  • To assess the reproducibility and validity of the QUEFAC to children aged 7 to 10 years. (bvsalud.org)
  • We will all be using a checklist ( http://www.nature.com/authors/policies/checklist.pdf ) intended to prompt authors to disclose technical and statistical information in their submissions and to encourage referees to consider aspects important for research reproducibility. (nature.com)
  • To help improve the statistical robustness of papers, Nature journals will now employ statisticians as consultants on certain papers, at the Editors' discretion and as suggested by referees. (nature.com)
  • As underscored in three Correspondences in this issue, statistical analysis of reproducibility itself is still immature. (nature.com)
  • A related problem is the lack of objective statistical validation in reporting modeling results, a very important topic that has been highlighted recently . (fieldofscience.com)
  • Even when protocols are supposedly accurately described, the absence of error bars or statistical variation means that one can get a different result even if the original recipe is meticulously followed. (fieldofscience.com)
  • Psychology results evaporate upon further review: Surprising reports, findings with marginal statistical significance least likely to be reproduced, study concludes by Bruce Bower (2:00pm, August 27, 2015) Science News . (rationalwiki.org)
  • In many cases, statistical (random) substitution results in essential changes in the hydrogen bonding systems of the cyclodextrin hydroxy rims, and is especially useful when the crystalline complex formation with the guest is undesirable. (beilstein-journals.org)
  • These guidelines ask journals to ensure, for example, that authors have included a minimum set of information on study design, that statistical checks have been carried out by reviewers, and that authors have been given enough information to enable animal strains, cell lines, reagents, and so on, to be uniquely identified reagents (for a full list of requirements, see the NIH Principles and Guidelines for Reporting Preclinical Research). (biomedcentral.com)
  • We posit that a contributor is simply a lack of specificity that is required to enable adequate research reproducibility. (researchgate.net)
  • In order to understand research results presented from data analysis investigations or perform new analyses based on these results, it is important to know whence the data came, how they were analysed and with what tools. (biomedcentral.com)
  • We join Nature and the other Nature research journals in this effort. (nature.com)
  • The checklist focuses on experimental and analytical design elements that are critical for the interpretation of research results but that are often reported incompletely. (nature.com)
  • Evidence-based policymaking: promise, challenges and opportunities for accounting and financial markets research ," Accounting and Business Research , Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 48(5), pages 582-608, July. (repec.org)
  • Laboratory external reproducibility of basic research into homeopathic potentisation remains a difficult issue. (thieme-connect.de)
  • Isokinetics and Exercise Science publishes studies associated with the methodology of muscle performance especially with respect to the issues of reproducibility and validity of testing, description of normal and pathological mechanical parameters which are derivable from muscle testing, applications in basic research topics such as motor learning paradigms and electromyography. (iospress.com)
  • The journal also publishes studies on applications in clinical settings and technical aspects of the various measurement systems employed in human muscle performance research. (iospress.com)
  • Yet in this experiment, research results were just as questionable. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • The Center for Open Science , funded by both the government and foundations, has been pushing for increased openness, integrity and reproducibility of research. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • PVLDB, established in 2008, is a scholarly journal for short and timely research papers, with a journal-style review and quality-assurance process. (vldb.org)
  • Journal articles have long been an expression of the results of research. (libguides.com)
  • Open science is an ambitious goal that aims to ensure the availability and usability of scholarly publications, the data that result from scholarly research, and the methodology, including code or algorithms, that was used to generate those data. (libguides.com)
  • Editors select a small number of articles recently published in the journal that they believe will be particularly interesting to readers, or important in the respective research area. (mdpi.com)
  • The aim is to provide a snapshot of some of the most exciting work published in the various research areas of the journal. (mdpi.com)
  • In this collection, state-of-the-art reviews and current research results, which focus on the process-structure-properties relationships in polymer AM, will be reported. (mdpi.com)
  • Papers in leading psychology, economic and science journals that fail to replicate and therefore are less likely to be true are often the most cited papers in academic research, according to a new study by the University of California San Diego's Rady School of Management. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The unreliable research tends to be cited as if the results were true long after the publication failed to replicate. (scitechdaily.com)
  • But it is peer review and the editorial policies and practices of journals that have come under the greatest scrutiny, and in June 2014 a set of guidelines for reporting preclinical research were proposed by the NIH to meet the perceived need for more stringent standards [ 12 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Scientists from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and partner institutions assessed the intra-laboratory and inter-observer reproducibility of a rapid test for detection of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) types at three different levels of the health-care system in one urban region and one rural region in the United Republic of Tanzania. (who.int)
  • International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. (lu.se)
  • In recent years, data on the reproducibility of published findings in some areas of research has become available. (bvsalud.org)
  • Still, the available figures suggest that research findings, even if peer-reviewed and published in reputable journals, should not be necessarily assumed to be reproducible. (bvsalud.org)
  • The academic personnel processes of the best medical schools should reward faculty whose research tests the reproducibility of prior published studies. (medscape.com)
  • This study evaluates the reproducibility, feasibility, and safety of blind protected BAL in mechanically ventilated children. (qxmd.com)
  • Reproducibility" is now increasingly on the radar of funders and is making its rounds in the wider media as well, with concerns of reproducibility making headlines at The Economist [ 5 ] and New York Times [ 6 ], amongst other outlets. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science by B. A. Nosek et al. (rationalwiki.org)
  • Response to Comment on "Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science" , Anderson et al. (rationalwiki.org)
  • Differences in how researchers prepare and image samples can lead to discrepancies in their results. (the-scientist.com)
  • The primary objective of a publications officer is to provide institutional guidance and support to researchers and trainees on how to prepare manuscripts for journal submission. (cmaj.ca)
  • In 2015, researchers reported on their replication of 100 experiments published in 2008 in three prominent psychology journals. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Some researchers may be tempted to make sure that they achieve "new and exciting results. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Reproducibility of maximal exercise test data in the HERITAG. (lww.com)
  • The reproducibility of responses to maximal cycle ergometer testing was determined using data from the HERITAGE Family study at four Clinical Centers in the United States and Canada. (lww.com)
  • Day-to-day variations are small and reproducibility is high for maximal values of heart rate, ventilation, V̇O 2 and V̇CO 2 at each of the four Clinical Centers of the HERITAGE Family Study. (lww.com)
  • In 2015, the Reproducibility Project at the University of Virginia tried to replicate the results of nearly 100 studies published in psychology journals. (crosswalk.com)
  • Reproducibility was evaluated using technical errors, coefficients of variation (CV) for repeated measures, and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) for selected variables obtained on the main cohort, as well as on the ICQC and TCQC substudies. (lww.com)
  • Results were consistent for the main cohort, the ICQC sample, the TCQC sample, and across all four Clinical Centers. (lww.com)
  • These concerns are even greater when data are pooled from several centers using the same procedures, as there might be differences in reproducibility across these centers. (lww.com)
  • However, some sources propose different uses of the two terms to distinguish the reproducibility of analyses based on the same data from those based on new experiments or observations (3). (bvsalud.org)
  • This suggests that the differences between experiment and theory are partly due to a lacking reproducibility for devices fabricated at different laboratories. (lu.se)
  • Varying the interface roughness height for different devices, we find that the peak current under lasing operation hardly changes, so that differences in interface quality appear not to be the sole reason for the lacking reproducibility. (lu.se)
  • For reproducibility, mean differences were observed for all nutrients investigated, correlation coefficients ranged from 0.12 to 0.54 and Kappa values from 0.01 to 0.39. (bvsalud.org)
  • However, its validity and reproducibility must be tested to assert that the instrument has a recognized quality. (bvsalud.org)
  • Consequently, this article proposes some guidance on how to increase the reproducibility of data in order to assist aspirations of refining results or methodology. (intarch.ac.uk)
  • Obtaining the same or similar results using different methodology does, however, increase confidence in the results. (rationalwiki.org)
  • We evaluated recent journal articles in the fields of Neuroscience, Developmental Biology, Immunology, Cell and Molecular Biology and General Biology, selected randomly based on a diversity of impact factors for the journals, publishers, and experimental method reporting guidelines. (researchgate.net)
  • The project pulled these studies from three different journals, Psychological Science, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, published in 2008 to see if they could get the same results as the initial findings. (wikipedia.org)
  • Results Bland-Altman plots showed negligible biases between test and retest sessions. (bepress.com)
  • An electronic laboratory notebook (ELN) keeps data organized and secure, boosting productivity and reproducibility. (the-scientist.com)
  • We need to describe how data are analyzed for discovery, audit trails, provenance and reproducibility. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The result is an ontology that meets the needs of a broad range of users by describing software, its information processing tasks, data inputs and outputs, data formats versions and so on. (biomedcentral.com)
  • As well as the reproducibility angle, describing software and the data it consumes and produces is important for search for software and construction of applications and workflows. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Data Management in Scholarly Journals and Possible Roles for Libraries - Some Insights from EDaWaX ," EconStor Open Access Articles and Book Chapters , ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics, vol. 23(1), pages 49-79. (repec.org)
  • While these experiments highlight some successes, they also point to significant problems in reproducing an analysis at various stages, from reading the data to plotting the results. (intarch.ac.uk)
  • But the same data cannot be used to generate and test a hypothesis, which can happen unintentionally and reduce the credibility of your results. (oercommons.org)
  • Serra-Garcia and Gneezy analyzed data from three influential replication projects which tried to systematically replicate the findings in top psychology, economic and general science journals (Nature and Science). (scitechdaily.com)
  • Many funding organizations and journals now require data management plans in applications. (umd.edu)
  • Now at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as Associate Director of Data Sciences, Bourne is concerned with the reproducibility of all NIH funded work, not just his own-and the problem is large. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Early Data Shows Vaccine Is More Than 90% Effective- Pfizer announced positive early results from its coronavirus vaccine trial, cementing the lead in a frenzied global race that has unfolded at record-breaking speed. (cdc.gov)
  • These gene expression results have into different risk group in order to help in making been compared with data obtained from using conven- treatment decisions. (lu.se)
  • These tests, however, are usually applied flexibly after data collection and examination, and end up being reported selectively according to the results found (18,19). (bvsalud.org)
  • The aims of this study were to characterize the test-retest reproducibility of in vivo OGSE and μA dMRI metrics in the mouse brain at 9.4 Tesla and provide estimates of required sample sizes for future investigations. (bepress.com)
  • In the United States, registration is a legal requirement for drugs and devices regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and many biomedical journals refuse to publish trials that are not registered. (rand.org)
  • This, in turn, may result from pressures put on scientists to succeed including the need to publish in "high impact" journals. (nih.gov)
  • Journals typically only publish articles with big effect sizes that reject the null hypothesis. (wikipedia.org)
  • Academics are rewarded professionally when they publish in a high-profile journal. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Those journals are more likely to publish new and exciting work. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Scientists are more likely to try to publish positive results than negative ones. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • So instead, they're incentivized to generate positive results they can publish. (vox.com)
  • As one social science website put it , "It was a mistake of the journal Social Science & Medicine to publish that original paper, but, on the plus side, they published Regnerus's criticism. (crosswalk.com)
  • The authors added that journals may feel pressure to publish interesting findings, and so do academics. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Medical and science journals should welcome and give higher priority to studies that attempt to reproduce studies that have already been published, even in the same journals, rather than always insisting that the results that they publish must be novel. (medscape.com)
  • Individual reviewers could take initiative by asking for replicable empirical results. (repec.org)
  • Clearly, fabricated results are not going to be replicable in follow-up experiments. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • This article has not yet been cited by articles in journals that are participating in Crossref Cited-by Linking. (pda.org)
  • Isokinetics and Exercise Science (IES) is an international journal devoted to the study of theoretical and applied aspects of human muscle performance. (iospress.com)
  • We searched the 25 highest-impact clinical psychology journals that published at least 1 RCT of a health-related psychological intervention in 2013. (rand.org)
  • Very few reports of RCTs published in clinical psychology journals were registered prospectively and completely. (rand.org)
  • 2 Jacobs J., Jonas W.B., Jimenez-Perez M., Crothers D. Homeopathy for childhood diarrhea: combined results and metaanalysis from three randomized, controlled clinical trials. (thieme-connect.de)
  • However, investigations into endogenous oxytocin and vasopressin levels as well as clinical trials evaluating the effect of exogenous oxytocin on PWS symptoms have had mixed results. (bvsalud.org)
  • The project has illustrated the growing problem of failed reproducibility in social science. (wikipedia.org)
  • This project has started a movement that has spread through the science world with the expanded testing of the reproducibility of published works. (wikipedia.org)
  • The authors emphasized that the findings reflect a problem that affects all of science and not just psychology, and that there is room to improve reproducibility in psychology. (wikipedia.org)
  • Science has a reproducibility problem. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Thank you for your interest in spreading the word on PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. (pda.org)
  • Message Body (Your Name) thought you would like to see the PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology web site. (pda.org)
  • Science is developing and progressing steadily in imaging modalities, and effective outcomes are starting to show up as a result of the shorter scanning periods needed as well as the higher-resolution images generated. (medworm.com)
  • The result is bad science. (vox.com)
  • Journal of Universal Computer Science, 18 (13). (lincoln.ac.uk)
  • Back in 2014, the journal Social Science & Medicine published a study entitled "Structural stigma and all-cause mortality in sexual minority populations. (crosswalk.com)
  • And I surely had no inkling that most rank and file medical science journals would themselves become unwitting repositories of a trove of irreproducible, or at best unreproduced, results. (medscape.com)
  • TRACKMAN® Connected is a tablet with accessories and apps that makes pipetting faster and more verifiable, which improves reliability, traceability, and reproducibility at the bench. (the-scientist.com)
  • In spite of high reliability and reproducibility, … this method does not allow the investigation of the dynamic properties of muscle. (iospress.com)
  • In four volunteers the reproducibility of the precord CSF flow waveforms was examined on different days. (ajnr.org)
  • The Reproducibility Project: Psychology was a crowdsourced collaboration of 270 contributing authors to repeat 100 published experimental and correlational psychological studies. (wikipedia.org)
  • The results of the Reproducibility Project might also affect public trust in psychology. (wikipedia.org)
  • Lay people who learned about the low replication rate found in the Reproducibility Project subsequently reported a lower trust in psychology, compared to people who were told that a high number of the studies had replicated. (wikipedia.org)
  • This problem with replicating results isn't limited to psychology or the social sciences. (crosswalk.com)
  • [4] A large-scale replication project was published in 2015 of the results of replication attempts of original published psychology experiments from 2008. (rationalwiki.org)
  • In experimental psychology, several warning signs about the low reproducibility of published findings emerged in the early 2010s (7,8). (bvsalud.org)
  • In 2015, the results of a large systematic replication of studies in cognitive and social psychology were released, which indicated success rates between 36% and 47% (9). (bvsalud.org)
  • Of the 67 projects they conducted to rerun experiments (47 of which involved cancer), only about 25 percent ended with results in line with the original findings. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • The results of their assessment have been published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention . (who.int)
  • European Journal of Cancer 40 (2004) 1837-1841 since approximately half of all new breast cancers are the St. Gallen criterion [1], which are based upon dif- diagnosed in the third world, where the analyses of ferent subsets of these conventional markers. (lu.se)
  • The journal Ethology is the first to adopt the guidelines, aimed at clarifying experimental design and the potential biases within. (the-scientist.com)
  • Reproducibility (Different team, different experimental setup): The measurement can be obtained with stated precision by a different team, a different measuring system, in a different location on multiple trials. (libguides.com)
  • Journals clearly have an important part to play in helping to ensure as far as possible that experimental design and analysis are appropriate, and that reporting standards are met. (biomedcentral.com)
  • In addition, MDT reproducibility in controls was assessed for a pre-typing and three post-typing time periods over three trials. (cdc.gov)
  • Reproducibility of knee extensor and flexor contraction velocity in healthy men and women assessed using tensiomyography: A registered report. (plos.org)
  • 2 - 7 Together, these practices limit the integrity of biomedical literature and hinder reproducibility efforts. (cmaj.ca)
  • Many RAND studies are published in peer-reviewed scholarly journals, as chapters in commercial books, or as documents published by other organizations. (rand.org)
  • There is great concern that results published in a large fraction of biomedical papers may not be reproducible. (nih.gov)
  • These 53 papers were published in high-profile journals, and the 21 that were published in the highest-impact journals were cited an average of 231 times in subsequent work. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • It's not clear why grain-fed mice are better able to recover after infection, but a study's findings suggest food type may skew the results of animal studies. (the-scientist.com)
  • In their initial publications 97 of these 100 studies claimed to have significant results. (wikipedia.org)
  • Inspiration was also taken from published studies and guidelines about reporting standards (or the lack thereof) and by the collective experience of editors at Nature journals. (nature.com)
  • The results have demonstrated that many new variants of the coa gene are present in Minia, Egypt, different from those reported in the previous studies. (hindawi.com)
  • For initial studies, newspapers didn't report on any null findings, meaning results without the expected outcomes. (theincidentaleconomist.com)
  • Serial HER-2/neu determinations after surgery seem to be useful in the early diagnosis of recurrence, mainly in patients with HER-2/neu overexpression in tissue, but additional studies are necessary to confirm these results. (degruyter.com)
  • Since then, similar projects have found reproducibility rates between 30% and 85% in different samples of studies from the social and behavioral sciences (10-13). (bvsalud.org)
  • This creates a problematic conflict of interest for the authors, as career advancement depends on obtaining particular results, biasing the conduct and the analysis of studies (17). (bvsalud.org)
  • As a biochemist, he particularly liked the way that journal focused on studies about the chemical noacetol . (medscape.com)
  • Blind protected bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) could be an interesting tool in the diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia in intubated children, but its reproducibility has never been evaluated. (qxmd.com)
  • The reproducibility revealed precise answers in the occlusal caries lesions diagnosis according to the criteria used. (bvsalud.org)
  • Results Out of 814 IWA measurement attempts, 462 WFMs could be obtained. (bmj.com)
  • Our results show that identifiability is a serious problem for reproducibility. (researchgate.net)
  • Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. (pda.org)