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Ioannidis 2014 PLOS Med

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Revision as of 22:46, 25 January 2021 by Iglesias-Gonzalez Javier (talk | contribs) (Iglesias-Gonzalez Javier moved page Ioannidis 2014 to Ioannidis 2014 PLOS Med)
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Ioannidis JPA (2014) How to make more published research true. PLOS Med 11(10): e1001747.

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Ioannidis JPA (2014) PLOS Med

Abstract: The achievements of scientific research are amazing. Science has grown from the occupation of a few dilettanti into a vibrant global industry with more than 15,000,000 people authoring more than 25,000,000 scientific papers in 1996–2011 alone [1]. However, true and readily applicable major discoveries are far fewer. Many new proposed associations and/or effects are false or grossly exaggerated [2],[3], and translation of knowledge into useful applications is often slow and potentially inefficient [4]. Given the abundance of data, research on research (i.e., meta-research) can derive empirical estimates of the prevalence of risk factors for high false-positive rates (underpowered studies; small effect sizes; low pre-study odds; flexibility in designs, definitions, outcomes, analyses; biases and conflicts of interest; bandwagon patterns; and lack of collaboration) [3]. Currently, an estimated 85% of research resources are wasted [5].

β€’ Bioblast editor: Iglesias-Gonzalez J


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