Schroyens, Natalie; 98433; Sigwald, Eric; Van Den Noortgate, Wim; 6844; Beckers, Tom; 5902; Luyten, Laura; 56402;
Research on memory reconsolidation has been booming in the last two decades, with numerous high-impact publications reporting promising amnestic interventions in rodents and humans. However, our own recently-published failed replication attempts of reactivation-dependent amnesia for fear memories in rats suggest that such amnestic effects are not a...
Treanor, Lee M Frank, Robert A Atyani, Almohannad Sharifabadi, Anahita Dehmoobad Hallgrimson, Zachary Fabiano, Nicholas Salameh, Jean-Paul McGrath, Trevor A Korevaar, Daniël A Bossuyt, Patrick
...
Published in
AJR. American journal of roentgenology
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether imaging diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) studies with positive conclusions or titles have a shorter time to publication than those with nonpositive (i.e., negative or neutral) conclusions or titles. We included primary imaging DTA studies from systematic reviews published in 2015. The conclusion and ti...
Marks-Anglin, Arielle Chen, Yong
Published in
Research synthesis methods
Publication bias is a well-known threat to the validity of meta-analyses and, more broadly, the reproducibility of scientific findings. When policies and recommendations are predicated on an incomplete evidence base, it undermines the goals of evidence-based decision-making. Great strides have been made in the last 50 years to understand and addres...
Bernard, René Weissgerber, Tracey L. Bobrov, Evgeny Winham, Stacey J. Dirnagl, Ulrich Riedel, Nico
Published in
Clinical Science (London, England : 1979)
Statistically significant findings are more likely to be published than non-significant or null findings, leaving scientists and healthcare personnel to make decisions based on distorted scientific evidence. Continuously expanding ´file drawers’ of unpublished data from well-designed experiments waste resources creates problems for researchers, the...
Mathur, Maya B VanderWeele, Tyler J
Published in
Research synthesis methods
Selective publication and reporting in individual papers compromise the scientific record, but are meta-analyses as compromised as their constituent studies? We systematically sampled 63 meta-analyses (each comprising at least 40 studies) in PLoS One, top medical journals, top psychology journals, and Metalab, an online, open-data database of devel...
Lin, Lifeng
Published in
Statistical methods in medical research
Publication bias frequently appears in meta-analyses when the included studies' results (e.g., p-values) influence the studies' publication processes. Some unfavorable studies may be suppressed from publication, so the meta-analytic results may be biased toward an artificially favorable direction. Many statistical tests have been proposed to detect...
Fayard, Marion Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier Wattier, Rémi Perrot-Minnot, Marie-Jeanne
Published in
Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
Several parasite species have the ability to modify their host's phenotype to their own advantage thereby increasing the probability of transmission from one host to another. This phenomenon of host manipulation is interpreted as the expression of a parasite extended phenotype. Manipulative parasites generally affect multiple phenotypic traits in t...
Oh, Sun Jung Takakura, Will Rezaie, Ali
Published in
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common disorder requiring complex, multidisciplinary management. Antidepressants are commonly used and recommended in guidelines for the treatment of patients with IBS. We assessed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on antidepressants in patients with IBS, with specific attention to study design and data quality...
Dowdy, Art Tincani, Matt Schneider, W Joel
Published in
Journal of applied behavior analysis
Publication bias is the disproportionate representation of studies with large effects and statistically significant findings in the published research literature. If publication bias occurs in single-case research design studies on applied behavior-analytic (ABA) interventions, it can result in inflated estimates of ABA intervention effects. We con...
Kong, Xiang-Zhen Francks, Clyde
Published in
Human brain mapping
The problem of poor reproducibility of scientific findings has received much attention over recent years, in a variety of fields including psychology and neuroscience. The problem has been partly attributed to publication bias and unwanted practices such as p-hacking. Low statistical power in individual studies is also understood to be an important...