在已发表的神经病学研究中采用可重复和透明的研究方法。

IF 7.2 Q1 ETHICS
Research integrity and peer review Pub Date : 2020-02-28 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s41073-020-0091-5
Shelby Rauh, Trevor Torgerson, Austin L Johnson, Jonathan Pollard, Daniel Tritz, Matt Vassar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:本研究的目的是评估神经病学出版物中可重复和透明研究实践的性质和程度:本研究旨在评估神经病学出版物中可重复和透明研究实践的性质和程度:方法:使用 NLM 目录确定 MEDLINE 索引的神经病学期刊。对这些期刊进行PubMed搜索,检索2014年至2018年5年间的出版物。随机抽样提取了出版物。两位作者使用经过试点测试的谷歌表格,以盲法重复方式进行数据提取。该表格提示数据提取者确定出版物是否提供了研究材料、原始数据、分析脚本和协议等项目的访问权限。此外,我们还确定了出版物是否包含在复制研究或系统综述中、是否进行了预先注册、是否有利益冲突声明、是否注明了资金来源以及是否为开放获取:我们的搜索发现了 223,932 篇符合纳入标准的出版物,并从中随机抽取了 400 篇。只有 389 篇文章可以访问,其中 271 篇提供了可供分析的经验数据。结果显示,9.4%的文章提供了材料,9.2%的文章提供了原始数据,0.7%的文章提供了分析脚本,0.7%的文章链接了协议,3.7%的文章是预先注册的。三分之一的抽样出版物缺乏资金或利益冲突声明。我们的样本中没有出版物被纳入复制研究,但有五分之一的出版物在系统综述或荟萃分析中被引用:结论:目前,已发表的神经病学研究并未持续提供可重复性所需的信息。不良研究报告的影响既会影响患者护理,也会增加研究浪费。作者、同行评审员、期刊和资金来源需要进行合作干预,以缓解这一问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Reproducible and transparent research practices in published neurology research.

Reproducible and transparent research practices in published neurology research.

Background: The objective of this study was to evaluate the nature and extent of reproducible and transparent research practices in neurology publications.

Methods: The NLM catalog was used to identify MEDLINE-indexed neurology journals. A PubMed search of these journals was conducted to retrieve publications over a 5-year period from 2014 to 2018. A random sample of publications was extracted. Two authors conducted data extraction in a blinded, duplicate fashion using a pilot-tested Google form. This form prompted data extractors to determine whether publications provided access to items such as study materials, raw data, analysis scripts, and protocols. In addition, we determined if the publication was included in a replication study or systematic review, was preregistered, had a conflict of interest declaration, specified funding sources, and was open access.

Results: Our search identified 223,932 publications meeting the inclusion criteria, from which 400 were randomly sampled. Only 389 articles were accessible, yielding 271 publications with empirical data for analysis. Our results indicate that 9.4% provided access to materials, 9.2% provided access to raw data, 0.7% provided access to the analysis scripts, 0.7% linked the protocol, and 3.7% were preregistered. A third of sampled publications lacked funding or conflict of interest statements. No publications from our sample were included in replication studies, but a fifth were cited in a systematic review or meta-analysis.

Conclusions: Currently, published neurology research does not consistently provide information needed for reproducibility. The implications of poor research reporting can both affect patient care and increase research waste. Collaborative intervention by authors, peer reviewers, journals, and funding sources is needed to mitigate this problem.

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