Scientific Utopia
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
An academic scientist's professional success depends on publishing. Publishing norms emphasize novel, positive results. As such, disciplinary incentives encourage design, analysis, and reporting decisions that elicit positive results and ignore negative results. Prior reports demonstrate how these incentives inflate the rate of false effects in published science. When incentives favor novelty over replication, false results persist in the literature unchallenged, reducing efficiency in knowledge accumulation. Previous suggestions to address this problem are unlikely to be effective. For example, a journal of negative results publishes otherwise unpublishable reports. This enshrines the low status of the…
Citation impact
1,333
total citations
- FWCI
- 66.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 166
Citations per year
Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Incentive
- Novelty
- Publishing
- Discipline
- Psychology
- Utopia
- Confirmation bias
- Replication (statistics)
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