Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study

Abstract Background In their research reports, scientists are expected to discuss limitations that their studies have. Previous research showed that often, such discussion is absent. Also, many journals emphasize the importance of avoiding overstatement of claims. We wanted to see to what extent edi...

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Main Authors: Kerem Keserlioglu, Halil Kilicoglu, Gerben ter Riet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-09-01
Series:Research Integrity and Peer Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41073-019-0078-2
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spelling doaj-43ac6b69df6447389c730adfef0ba37f2020-11-25T03:35:00ZengBMCResearch Integrity and Peer Review2058-86152019-09-01411810.1186/s41073-019-0078-2Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after studyKerem Keserlioglu0Halil Kilicoglu1Gerben ter Riet2Department of General Practice, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam UMC, University of AmsterdamLister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications, U.S. National Library of MedicineDepartment of Cardiology, Amsterdam UMC, University of AmsterdamAbstract Background In their research reports, scientists are expected to discuss limitations that their studies have. Previous research showed that often, such discussion is absent. Also, many journals emphasize the importance of avoiding overstatement of claims. We wanted to see to what extent editorial handling and peer review affects self-acknowledgment of limitations and hedging of claims. Methods Using software that automatically detects limitation-acknowledging sentences and calculates the level of hedging in sentences, we compared the submitted manuscripts and their ultimate publications of all randomized trials published in 2015 in 27 BioMed Central (BMC) journals and BMJ Open. We used mixed linear and logistic regression models, accounting for clustering of manuscript-publication pairs within journals, to quantify before-after changes in the mean numbers of limitation-acknowledging sentences, in the probability that a manuscript with zero self-acknowledged limitations ended up as a publication with at least one and in hedging scores. Results Four hundred forty-six manuscript-publication pairs were analyzed. The median number of manuscripts per journal was 10.5 (interquartile range 6–18). The average number of distinct limitation sentences increased by 1.39 (95% CI 1.09–1.76), from 2.48 in manuscripts to 3.87 in publications. Two hundred two manuscripts (45.3%) did not mention any limitations. Sixty-three (31%, 95% CI 25–38) of these mentioned at least one after peer review. Changes in mean hedging scores were negligible. Conclusions Our findings support the idea that editorial handling and peer review lead to more self-acknowledgment of study limitations, but not to changes in linguistic nuance.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41073-019-0078-2Peer reviewStudy limitationsBefore-after studyLinguistic spinHedgingTransparency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerem Keserlioglu
Halil Kilicoglu
Gerben ter Riet
spellingShingle Kerem Keserlioglu
Halil Kilicoglu
Gerben ter Riet
Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
Research Integrity and Peer Review
Peer review
Study limitations
Before-after study
Linguistic spin
Hedging
Transparency
author_facet Kerem Keserlioglu
Halil Kilicoglu
Gerben ter Riet
author_sort Kerem Keserlioglu
title Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
title_short Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
title_full Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
title_fullStr Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
title_full_unstemmed Impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
title_sort impact of peer review on discussion of study limitations and strength of claims in randomized trial reports: a before and after study
publisher BMC
series Research Integrity and Peer Review
issn 2058-8615
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Background In their research reports, scientists are expected to discuss limitations that their studies have. Previous research showed that often, such discussion is absent. Also, many journals emphasize the importance of avoiding overstatement of claims. We wanted to see to what extent editorial handling and peer review affects self-acknowledgment of limitations and hedging of claims. Methods Using software that automatically detects limitation-acknowledging sentences and calculates the level of hedging in sentences, we compared the submitted manuscripts and their ultimate publications of all randomized trials published in 2015 in 27 BioMed Central (BMC) journals and BMJ Open. We used mixed linear and logistic regression models, accounting for clustering of manuscript-publication pairs within journals, to quantify before-after changes in the mean numbers of limitation-acknowledging sentences, in the probability that a manuscript with zero self-acknowledged limitations ended up as a publication with at least one and in hedging scores. Results Four hundred forty-six manuscript-publication pairs were analyzed. The median number of manuscripts per journal was 10.5 (interquartile range 6–18). The average number of distinct limitation sentences increased by 1.39 (95% CI 1.09–1.76), from 2.48 in manuscripts to 3.87 in publications. Two hundred two manuscripts (45.3%) did not mention any limitations. Sixty-three (31%, 95% CI 25–38) of these mentioned at least one after peer review. Changes in mean hedging scores were negligible. Conclusions Our findings support the idea that editorial handling and peer review lead to more self-acknowledgment of study limitations, but not to changes in linguistic nuance.
topic Peer review
Study limitations
Before-after study
Linguistic spin
Hedging
Transparency
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41073-019-0078-2
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