Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science

When consumers of science (readers and reviewers) lack relevant details about the study design, data, and analyses, they cannot adequately evaluate the strength of a scientific study. Lack of transparency is common in science, and is encouraged by journals that place more emphasis on the aesthetic a...

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Main Author: Simine Vazire
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of California Press 2017-02-01
Series:Collabra: Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.collabra.org/articles/74
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spelling doaj-73b829d1046040fba326693b0eb4747f2020-11-24T20:42:05ZengUniversity of California PressCollabra: Psychology2474-73942017-02-013110.1525/collabra.7438Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in ScienceSimine Vazire0University of California, Davis,When consumers of science (readers and reviewers) lack relevant details about the study design, data, and analyses, they cannot adequately evaluate the strength of a scientific study. Lack of transparency is common in science, and is encouraged by journals that place more emphasis on the aesthetic appeal of a manuscript than the robustness of its scientific claims. In doing this, journals are implicitly encouraging authors to do whatever it takes to obtain eye-catching results. To achieve this, researchers can use common research practices that beautify results at the expense of the robustness of those results (e.g., p-hacking). The problem is not engaging in these practices, but failing to disclose them. A car whose carburetor is duct-taped to the rest of the car might work perfectly fine, but the buyer has a right to know about the duct-taping. Without high levels of transparency in scientific publications, consumers of scientific manuscripts are in a similar position as buyers of used cars – they cannot reliably tell the difference between lemons and high quality findings. This phenomenon – quality uncertainty – has been shown to erode trust in economic markets, such as the used car market. The same problem threatens to erode trust in science. The solution is to increase transparency and give consumers of scientific research the information they need to accurately evaluate research. Transparency would also encourage researchers to be more careful in how they conduct their studies and write up their results. To make this happen, we must tie journals’ reputations to their practices regarding transparency. Reviewers hold a great deal of power to make this happen, by demanding the transparency needed to rigorously evaluate scientific manuscripts. The public expects transparency from science, and appropriately so – we should be held to a higher standard than used car salespeople.https://www.collabra.org/articles/74transparencyopen sciencereplicabilityscientific integrity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simine Vazire
spellingShingle Simine Vazire
Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
Collabra: Psychology
transparency
open science
replicability
scientific integrity
author_facet Simine Vazire
author_sort Simine Vazire
title Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
title_short Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
title_full Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
title_fullStr Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
title_full_unstemmed Quality Uncertainty Erodes Trust in Science
title_sort quality uncertainty erodes trust in science
publisher University of California Press
series Collabra: Psychology
issn 2474-7394
publishDate 2017-02-01
description When consumers of science (readers and reviewers) lack relevant details about the study design, data, and analyses, they cannot adequately evaluate the strength of a scientific study. Lack of transparency is common in science, and is encouraged by journals that place more emphasis on the aesthetic appeal of a manuscript than the robustness of its scientific claims. In doing this, journals are implicitly encouraging authors to do whatever it takes to obtain eye-catching results. To achieve this, researchers can use common research practices that beautify results at the expense of the robustness of those results (e.g., p-hacking). The problem is not engaging in these practices, but failing to disclose them. A car whose carburetor is duct-taped to the rest of the car might work perfectly fine, but the buyer has a right to know about the duct-taping. Without high levels of transparency in scientific publications, consumers of scientific manuscripts are in a similar position as buyers of used cars – they cannot reliably tell the difference between lemons and high quality findings. This phenomenon – quality uncertainty – has been shown to erode trust in economic markets, such as the used car market. The same problem threatens to erode trust in science. The solution is to increase transparency and give consumers of scientific research the information they need to accurately evaluate research. Transparency would also encourage researchers to be more careful in how they conduct their studies and write up their results. To make this happen, we must tie journals’ reputations to their practices regarding transparency. Reviewers hold a great deal of power to make this happen, by demanding the transparency needed to rigorously evaluate scientific manuscripts. The public expects transparency from science, and appropriately so – we should be held to a higher standard than used car salespeople.
topic transparency
open science
replicability
scientific integrity
url https://www.collabra.org/articles/74
work_keys_str_mv AT siminevazire qualityuncertaintyerodestrustinscience
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