Misinformation: an empirical study with scientists and communicators during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Q1 Medicine
BMJ Open Science Pub Date : 2021-11-25 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjos-2021-100188
Lisa Parker, Jennifer A Byrne, Micah Goldwater, Nick Enfield
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: To study the experiences and views within the health science community regarding the spread and prevention of science misinformation within and beyond the setting of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: An exploratory study with an empirical ethics approach using qualitative interviews with Australians who produce, communicate and study health science research.

Results: Key elements that participants considered might facilitate misinformation included: the production of low-quality, fraudulent or biased science research; inadequate public access to high-quality research; insufficient public reading of high-quality research. Strategies to reduce or prevent misinformation could come from within the academic community, academic and lay media publishing systems, government funders and educators of the general public. Recommended solutions from within the scientific community included: rewarding research translation, encouraging standardised study design, increasing use of automated quality assessment tools, mandating study protocol registration, transparent peer review, facilitating wider use of open access and use of newer technologies to target public audiences. There was disagreement over whether preprints were part of the problem or part of the solution.

Conclusions: There is concern from within the health science community about systemic failings that might facilitate the production and spread of false or misleading science information. We advocate for further research into ways to minimise the production and spread of misinformation about COVID-19 and other science crises in the future.

Abstract Image

错误信息:在 COVID-19 大流行期间对科学家和传播者进行的实证研究。
目的研究健康科学界对于在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下和背景之外传播和预防科学误导信息的经验和观点:一项探索性研究,采用实证伦理方法,对从事健康科学研究的澳大利亚人进行定性访谈:结果:参与者认为可能助长误导的关键因素包括:低质量、欺诈性或有偏见的科学研究的产生;公众对高质量研究的获取不足;公众对高质量研究的阅读不足。减少或防止误导的策略可以来自学术界、学术和非专业媒体出版系统、政府资助者和公众教育者。科学界建议的解决方案包括:奖励研究成果转化、鼓励标准化研究设计、增加自动质量评估工具的使用、强制要求研究方案注册、透明的同行评审、促进开放获取的更广泛使用以及使用更新的技术来面向公众受众。对于预印本是问题的一部分还是解决方案的一部分,与会者意见不一:结论:健康科学界担心系统性失误会助长虚假或误导性科学信息的生产和传播。我们主张进一步研究如何最大限度地减少有关 COVID-19 和未来其他科学危机的错误信息的产生和传播。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Open Science
BMJ Open Science Medicine-General Medicine
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
31 weeks
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