Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture

There has been much talk of psychological science undergoing a renaissance with recent years being marked by dramatic changes in research practices and to the publishing landscape. This article briefly summarises a number of the ways in which psychological science can improve its rigor, lessen use o...

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Main Author: Daryl B. O’Connor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2021-03-01
Series:Health Psychology Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.healthpsychologybulletin.com/articles/30
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spelling doaj-bb5117b0ad1145f3bb24d7c908eb3a722021-04-27T07:15:32ZengUbiquity PressHealth Psychology Bulletin2398-59412021-03-015110.5334/hpb.3022Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research CultureDaryl B. O’Connor0School of Psychology, University of LeedsThere has been much talk of psychological science undergoing a renaissance with recent years being marked by dramatic changes in research practices and to the publishing landscape. This article briefly summarises a number of the ways in which psychological science can improve its rigor, lessen use of questionable research practices and reduce publication bias. The importance of preregistration as a useful tool to increase transparency of science and improve the robustness of our evidence base, especially in COVID-19 times, is presented. Moreover, the benefits of using Registered Reports, the article format that allows peer review of research studies before the results are known, are outlined. Finally, the article argues that the scientific architecture and the academic reward structure need to change with a move towards “slow science” and away from the “publish or perish” culture.https://www.healthpsychologybulletin.com/articles/30open sciencereplication crisisreproducibilitypsychologyregistered reports
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daryl B. O’Connor
spellingShingle Daryl B. O’Connor
Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
Health Psychology Bulletin
open science
replication crisis
reproducibility
psychology
registered reports
author_facet Daryl B. O’Connor
author_sort Daryl B. O’Connor
title Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
title_short Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
title_full Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
title_fullStr Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
title_full_unstemmed Leonardo da Vinci, preregistration and the Architecture of Science: Towards a More Open and Transparent Research Culture
title_sort leonardo da vinci, preregistration and the architecture of science: towards a more open and transparent research culture
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Health Psychology Bulletin
issn 2398-5941
publishDate 2021-03-01
description There has been much talk of psychological science undergoing a renaissance with recent years being marked by dramatic changes in research practices and to the publishing landscape. This article briefly summarises a number of the ways in which psychological science can improve its rigor, lessen use of questionable research practices and reduce publication bias. The importance of preregistration as a useful tool to increase transparency of science and improve the robustness of our evidence base, especially in COVID-19 times, is presented. Moreover, the benefits of using Registered Reports, the article format that allows peer review of research studies before the results are known, are outlined. Finally, the article argues that the scientific architecture and the academic reward structure need to change with a move towards “slow science” and away from the “publish or perish” culture.
topic open science
replication crisis
reproducibility
psychology
registered reports
url https://www.healthpsychologybulletin.com/articles/30
work_keys_str_mv AT darylboconnor leonardodavincipreregistrationandthearchitectureofsciencetowardsamoreopenandtransparentresearchculture
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