We agree with and support the practice of
publishing research findings in de-identified form.
Publishing research findings in peer - reviewed journals is an important part of being a scientist.
Interestingly, over a decade ago Stanford University professor John Ioannidis published a paper entitled, Why Most
Published Research Findings Are False.
Hence the eye - catching title of his paper: «Why Most
Published Research Findings Are False.»
The recently
published research findings are part of the Spatiodiversity project.
The newly
published research finds that FRI:
To confuse the issue further, other
published research finds that in rats conditioned to fear a shock to the foot, memory formation and subsequent recall, or reconsolidation, are actually separate processes, suggesting that established memories may be malleable and sensitive to disruption.
The team
published the research findings in the journal «Cancer Research.»
When the clinical epidemiologist John Ioannidis published a paper entitled «Why most
published research findings are false» in 2005, he made a lot of scientists very uncomfortable.
These journals offer to rapidly
publish research findings, typically at a lower cost than legitimate journals, but do not provide quality controls such as peer - review.
The research team, led by HKUST's Chair Professor of Division of Life Science Professor Pei - Yuan Qian and HKBU's Associate Professor of Biology Dr Jian - Wen Qiu, has
published the research findings in the international academic journal Nature Ecology & Evolution in early April.
There is an opportunity to present and
publish research findings, just less than in academia, where the old adage is «publish or perish.»
Another misperception is that no opportunity exists to present or
publish research findings in industry.
«Attempting to estimate the robustness of
a published research finding is notoriously difficult,» said Marcus Munafò, a biological psychologist at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom, a key figure in tackling irreproducibility.
Scientific societies are seeking new tools to measure the reproducibility of
published research findings, amid concerns that many can not be reproduced independently.
Bayer and colleagues Imran Mahbub, Matthew Chappell, John Ruter, and Marc van Iersel from the Department of Horticulture at the University of Georgia
published their research findings in the August 2013 issue of HortScience.
The researchers relied on citations from
published research findings, using «bibliometrics» to work backwards to uncover the stepwise scientific advances that led to the new medications.
The authors» recently
published research found that total sleep time and quality of sleep predicted the loss of fat in people enrolled in a weight loss program.
The International Journal of Yoga Therapy is preparing to
publish research findings in 2009 resulting from a study evaluating mood changes prior to and following yoga therapy.
Because
published research found that higher intake of tomatoes or higher blood levels of lycopene correlates with a reduced risk of cancer, especially prostate cancer.
The project recently
published research findings in the book Maker - Centered Learning: Empowering Young People to Shape Their Worlds.
While students, small businesses, and independent researchers are expected to be the major consumers of these mountains of content, this is a bold first move in helping civic leaders, publishers, and citizens see the value of open access, an often hotly contested topic especially where government funded and
published research findings are concerned.
The Marine Mammal Center scientists conduct research on marine mammal disease immunology and
publish research findings in leading scientific journals.
PIK members
publish their research findings in international publications and advise policymakers in Germany and abroad.
«There is increasing concern that most current
published research findings are false.
In «Why Most
Published Research Findings Are False,» Stanford University epidemiologist John loannidis reported that «for most study designs and settings, it is more likely for a research claim to be false than true.
Dr. Ioannidis [«Why Most
Published Research Findings Are False,» in PLOS Medicine] found that the more popular an idea becomes and the more researchers the idea attracts the worse the resulting science will be.
«Most
Published Research Findings Are False — But a Little Replication Goes a Long Way «https://t.co/vmxZK4qMVi
«Why most
published research findings are false» «Most
published research findings are false — But a little replication goes a long way» «Why most
published research findings are false: Problems in the analysis» «Why most
published research findings are false: Author's reply to Goodman and Greenland»
John P.A. Ioannidis has showed: «Why most
published research findings are false.»
The result is that most
published research findings are wrong.
It is unacceptable for authors not to respond to legitimate questions concerning
their published research findings.
The OMB says that the guidelines don't apply to «grantees who
publish their research findings in the same manner as their academic colleagues,» something that Mann did and does.
He is perhaps best known for a 2005 paper «Why Most
Published Research Findings Are False.»
Not exact matches
The Terawatt Workshop, convened last year by the Global Alliance of Solar Energy
Research Institutes, recently
published its
findings.
Twitter did not say when the study will conclude, but the researchers said they would
publish their
findings and post their methodology on a public
research website so that others can try to replicate it to confirm their results.
For example, if you're trying to
publish statistics on small business websites, you could collect a sample group from small business websites you
find on your own, and use their sites to inform your
research.
Decades of
research, including a new study
published in December in the Journal of the American Medical Association, has failed to
find substantial evidence that vitamins and supplements do any significant good.
Research published last year in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
found a link between the color green and creativity.
But
research published in Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
found that «when people viewed pictures of others being loved or cared for, their brains» threat response became muted,» writes Inc.com's Jill Krasny.
He said that his
research should not be called «modeling» because it is based on the combined
findings of thousands of lab results, as well as several other studies he has
published.
The two have just
published Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and
Finding Joy, a book that draws on Sandberg's journey, Grant's
research, and interviews with survivors of the worst.
The American Meteorological Society
published research in 2011 that
found current temperature has a bigger effect on our happiness than variables like wind speed and humidity, or even the average temperature over the course of a day.
The Tax Foundation recently
published research that
found America's top rate of business tax — 35 per cent — is the highest amongst the 34 industrialized nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
That
research will be crucial: An earlier effort by another company, Pathway Genomics, to create a «liquid biopsy» for cancer was greeted in September by a stern letter from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warning that the agency had «not
found any
published evidence that this test or any similar test has been clinically validated as a screening tool for early detection of cancer in high risk individuals.»
Recent
research published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
found the performance of workers with insomnia or sleep problems lags their well - rested colleagues, and that costs companies between $ 2,500 and $ 3,156 annually per sleepy employee.
In Kilduff's most recent
research, which has yet to be
published, he
finds that U.S. universities engaged in a long - standing rivalry (Harvard vs. Yale, USC vs. UCLA) benefit from increased merchandise sales, as well as a a higher proportion of alumni who donate to the school, even after controlling for factors like academic and athletic rank.
The first large and comprehensive review of all the
published research on e-cigs added some additional weight to that conclusion,
finding «substantial evidence» that young people who vape are more likely to smoke conventional cigarettes than those who don't.
Search results are then ranked in order of importance, similar to how Google News search gives a higher rank to highly linked sources, thus making it easier to
find the most relevant or authoritative
research among the thousands of scientific papers that are
published every day.
The
finding is not limited to those at the very top: when she extended her
research,
published in a recent edition of the Harvard Business Review, to include the careers of 14,000 lower - level executives, she reached similar conclusions.