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Trust

Scientists for Open Science
14th September 2021

Open Science is trusted science.

Practicing inclusion and transparency in research communication and the peer review process demonstrates credibility, reduces bias, and builds trust—both in individual studies and scientific research more generally.

From the very beginning of the investigatory process, Open Science helps create an environment where high-quality research can flourish, the impact of bias is limited, and everyone has the opportunity to verify and validate the work.

Tuesday 14th September

Open science is trusted science

A conversation covering how Open Science practices increase trust in science, and how we can best ensure such practices are seen as core values, habits, and norms rather than obstacles or administrative burdens.

Speakers

VeroniqueKiermer100x100

Veronique Kiermer, Chief Scientific Officer, PLOS

Yungen Chee

Yung En Chee, Senior Research Fellow, School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, University of Melbourne

Simine Vazire

Simine Vazire Professor, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne

How can you practice Open Science?

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Resources to help you practice Trust

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Whatever your approach, making methods publicly accessible inspires trust, facilitates reproducibility and reuse, and helps to keep your work relevant. Discover your options for communicating methods with PLOS.

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How to Report Statistics

A statistical analysis forms the heart of both the methods and results sections of a manuscript. Learn how to report statistical analyses, and what other context is important for publication success and future reproducibility.

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Join the Discussion
Do you see a lack of trust in published research as a significant issue in your field? In society more broadly?

Leave a comment below to participate in this discussion.

Thank you for taking part in this discussion. Please note that your information will only be used for the purposes of leaving a comment on this discussion board.

10 responses to “Trust: Tuesday’s full program”

  1. I am a Brazilian researcher in the field of entomology/ecology. Since the beginning of my training as a researcher, in the institutions I have attended, it is usual to rely on peer reviews. While there are certainly problems and biased or deficient studies may have been published, they are still in the minority. Unfortunately, Brazil is currently going through a very delicate situation regarding the availability of funds for science. And this practically eliminates the possibility of publishing in open access journals. Making many quality types of research to be published in subscription journals or journals with low impact and little demand by the world scientific community.

  2. Lack of trust is a huge problem in my field, most of the “scientific information” is full of conflicts of interest. I am a clinical oncologist and the skyrocketing drug prices in the last ten years has led to the extinction of independent confirmatory trials of the last 50 FDA approved drugs. That is simply bad science: we are treating our patients with the schedule (drug and doses) selected by the producer of the drug.

  3. As a practitioner marine ecologist, I trust the peer review process underlying published research. Although, there are instances where the methodological procedures, the survey sampling or sampling design and the conclusions draw from the data are not coherent, thus leading to conjectures instead of real data interpretation, and I wonder how those aspects were overlooked by the reviewing process. This situation results in biased conclusions, lack of inference power to draw generalizations that prevent broader societal impacts of ecological research. Open access to methodological procedures, data and peer review processes might help to improve our impact on society needs. Having said that, money issues plays an utterly important role, particularly for researchers in societies where science funding is very limited and even scarce.

  4. I realy feel glad when I read the question. Thank you for rising this interesting question. In my opinion, most published paper can be trusted but some papers seem somewhat confusing in their writings, data analysis, and conclusion. The reason may relate with question of money.

  5. I realy feel glad when i read the question. Thank you for risi g this interesting question. In my opnon, most published paper can be trusted but some papers seem somewhat confusing in their writings data analysis, and conclusion. The reason may be the question of money.

  6. Thank you for very interesting conversation. I would like to know the reference of the article the Ms Yung En Chee is referring to at the beginning of the interview on data being scrutinized by 29 different teams.
    Thank you

    • Hi Geneviève,

      The article is: Crowdsourced research: Many hands make tight work. Raphael Silberzahn and Eric L. Uhlmann. doi.org/10.1038/526189a

      Best,
      Dora

  7. The publication of scientific research is becoming 60% money oriented and money dependent. Open science -peer review system is 50% biased and most of the noble submissions are rejected on silly and totally misleading objections. But as and when a paper is published as “Open” the utility and adequate dissemination is ensured. There should be enough funds both with a person and or his/her institution to support publication. This has been a dream for me. Thousands of research workers in many countries are deprived of publication support.

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