找到评价研究的正确词汇:eLife 评估词汇的实证评估

Tom E. Hardwicke, Sarah R Schiavone, Beth Clarke, Simine Vazire
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引用次数: 0

摘要

eLife 期刊发表的研究文章都附有简短的评价声明,这些声明使用规定词汇中的短语从两个维度对研究进行评价:重要性和支持力度。从直观上看,规定的短语似乎是高度同义的(例如,重要/有价值、令人信服/有说服力),读者可能看不出词汇的顺序结构。我们进行了一次在线重复测量实验,以衡量这些短语是否被按照预期进行了解释。我们还测试了另一个(我们认为)结构不那么模糊的词汇。301 位拥有博士学位或研究生学位的参与者使用 0-100% 的评分标准,对使用这两个词汇表中的短语描述的假设研究的重要性和支持力度进行评分。对于 eLife 词汇表,大多数参与者的隐含排名在重要性(n = 59,20% 匹配,95% 置信区间[15%-24%])和支持强度(n = 45,15% 匹配[11%-20%])两个维度上都与预期排名不符。相比之下,对于替代词汇,大多数参与者的隐含排序在重要性(n = 188,62% 匹配[57%-68%])和支持强度(n = 201,67% 匹配[62%-72%])两个维度上都与预期排序一致。eLife 的词汇倾向于产生不那么一致的人际解释,尽管替代词汇仍然引起了一些远离量表中间的重叠解释。我们推测,明确提出词汇的预期序数结构可以改善解释。总之,这些研究结果表明,使用结构性更强、含糊度更低的语言可以改善研究评价的交流。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Finding the right words to evaluate research: An empirical appraisal of eLife's assessment vocabulary
Research articles published by the journal eLife are accompanied by short evaluation statements that use phrases from a prescribed vocabulary to evaluate research on two dimensions: importance and strength of support. Intuitively, the prescribed phrases appear to be highly synonymous (e.g., important/valuable, compelling/convincing) and the vocabulary's ordinal structure may not be obvious to readers. We conducted an online repeated-measures experiment to gauge whether the phrases were interpreted as intended. We also tested an alternative vocabulary with (in our view) a less ambiguous structure. 301 participants with a doctoral or graduate degree used a 0-100% scale to rate the importance and strength of support of hypothetical studies described using phrases from both vocabularies. For the eLife vocabulary, most participants' implied ranking did not match the intended ranking on both the importance (n = 59, 20% matched, 95% confidence interval [15% to 24%]) and strength of support dimensions (n = 45, 15% matched [11% to 20%]). By contrast, for the alternative vocabulary, most participants' implied ranking did match the intended ranking on both the importance (n = 188, 62% matched [57% to 68%]) and strength of support dimensions (n = 201, 67% matched [62% to 72%]). eLife's vocabulary tended to produce less consistent betweenperson interpretations, though the alternative vocabulary still elicited some overlapping interpretations away from the middle of the scale. We speculate that explicit presentation of a vocabulary's intended ordinal structure could improve interpretation. Overall, these findings suggest that more structured and less ambiguous language can improve communication of research evaluations.
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