
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Many researchers have been critical of the biases that the publication process can introduce into science. For example, they argue that a focus on publishing interesting or significant results can give a false impression of what broader research is finding about a particular field.
To tackle this, some scientists have championed the publication of Registered Reports. These articles split the peer review process in two, first critically assessing the methodology of a research study before data is collected, and again when the results are found. The idea being to encourage robust research regardless of the outcome.
In this episode of Nature's Take we discuss Nature's recent adoption of the format, the pros and cons of Registered Reports, and what more needs to be done to tackle publication bias.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Springer Nature Limited4.5
716716 ratings
Many researchers have been critical of the biases that the publication process can introduce into science. For example, they argue that a focus on publishing interesting or significant results can give a false impression of what broader research is finding about a particular field.
To tackle this, some scientists have championed the publication of Registered Reports. These articles split the peer review process in two, first critically assessing the methodology of a research study before data is collected, and again when the results are found. The idea being to encourage robust research regardless of the outcome.
In this episode of Nature's Take we discuss Nature's recent adoption of the format, the pros and cons of Registered Reports, and what more needs to be done to tackle publication bias.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

1,384 Listeners

616 Listeners

946 Listeners
0 Listeners

16 Listeners

4 Listeners

523 Listeners

962 Listeners

425 Listeners

412 Listeners

823 Listeners

6,355 Listeners

347 Listeners

355 Listeners

482 Listeners

6,357 Listeners

112 Listeners

491 Listeners