Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?

Prestigious scientific journals traditionally decide which articles to accept at least partially based on the results of research. This backloaded selectivity enforces publication bias and encourages authors to selectively report their most persuasive findings, even when they are misleading, biased,...

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Main Author: Christopher D Chambers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-03-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000693
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spelling doaj-2acddcf3715a4f109eb804a4b9c2099f2021-07-02T16:29:11ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852020-03-01183e300069310.1371/journal.pbio.3000693Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?Christopher D ChambersPrestigious scientific journals traditionally decide which articles to accept at least partially based on the results of research. This backloaded selectivity enforces publication bias and encourages authors to selectively report their most persuasive findings, even when they are misleading, biased, and unreliable. One answer to backloaded selectivity is to curtail editorial selectivity altogether, deciding publication on the basis of technical merit alone. However, this strategy is unlikely to win appeal among highly selective journals. A third way is to frontload selectivity-reaching editorial decisions based on rigorous evaluation of the research question and methodology but before the research is conducted and thus regardless of the eventual results. This model, now offered at PLOS Biology in the form of "Preregistered Research Articles" (or Registered Reports), allows a scientific journal to maintain high selectivity for the importance and rigor of research while simultaneously eliminating outcome bias by editors, reviewers, and authors. I believe the rise of Registered Reports among selective journals will change how research is evaluated and may trigger the realization that frontloaded selectivity is the most secure way of advancing knowledge.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000693
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher D Chambers
spellingShingle Christopher D Chambers
Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
PLoS Biology
author_facet Christopher D Chambers
author_sort Christopher D Chambers
title Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
title_short Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
title_full Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
title_fullStr Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
title_full_unstemmed Frontloading selectivity: A third way in scientific publishing?
title_sort frontloading selectivity: a third way in scientific publishing?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Prestigious scientific journals traditionally decide which articles to accept at least partially based on the results of research. This backloaded selectivity enforces publication bias and encourages authors to selectively report their most persuasive findings, even when they are misleading, biased, and unreliable. One answer to backloaded selectivity is to curtail editorial selectivity altogether, deciding publication on the basis of technical merit alone. However, this strategy is unlikely to win appeal among highly selective journals. A third way is to frontload selectivity-reaching editorial decisions based on rigorous evaluation of the research question and methodology but before the research is conducted and thus regardless of the eventual results. This model, now offered at PLOS Biology in the form of "Preregistered Research Articles" (or Registered Reports), allows a scientific journal to maintain high selectivity for the importance and rigor of research while simultaneously eliminating outcome bias by editors, reviewers, and authors. I believe the rise of Registered Reports among selective journals will change how research is evaluated and may trigger the realization that frontloaded selectivity is the most secure way of advancing knowledge.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000693
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