| Literature DB >> 27832101 |
Susanne Wieschowski1, Diego S Silva1,2, Daniel Strech1.
Abstract
Publication bias in animal research, its extent, its predictors, and its potential countermeasures are increasingly discussed. Recent reports and conferences highlight the potential strengths of animal study registries (ASRs) in this regard. Others have warned that prospective registration of animal studies could diminish creativity, add administrative burdens, and complicate intellectual property issues in translational research. A literature review and 21 international key-informant interviews were conducted and thematically analyzed to develop a comprehensive matrix of main- and subcategories for potential ASR-related strengths, weaknesses, facilitators, and barriers (SWFBs). We identified 130 potential SWFBs. All stakeholder groups agreed that ASRs could in various ways improve the quality and refinement of animal studies while allowing their number to be reduced, as well as supporting meta-research on animal studies. However, all stakeholder groups also highlighted the potential for theft of ideas, higher administrative burdens, and reduced creativity and serendipity in animal studies. Much more detailed reasoning was captured in the interviews than is currently found in the literature, providing a comprehensive account of the issues and arguments around ASRs. All stakeholder groups highlighted compelling potential strengths of ASRs. Although substantial weaknesses and implementation barriers were highlighted as well, different governance measures might help to minimize or even eliminate their impact. Such measures might include confidentiality time frames for accessing prospectively registered protocols, harmonized reporting requirements across ASRs, ethics reviews, lab notebooks, and journal submissions. The comprehensive information gathered in this study could help to guide a more evidence-based debate and to design pilot tests for ASRs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27832101 PMCID: PMC5104355 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2000391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Definitions for SWFBs of ASRs.
| The properties that enable ASRs to reach their intended goals. For our purposes, it also refers to the ethical arguments in favor of adopting ASRs. | |
| The properties that prevent ASRs reaching their intended goals or that lead to unintended effects. For our purposes, it also refers to the ethical arguments against adopting ASRs. | |
| The circumstances that help ASRs to reach their intended goals. For our purposes, it refers to external or procedural factors that support the effective implementation of ASRs. “Effective” here means that the intended goals outweigh the potential negative effects. | |
| The circumstances that counter ASRs’ ability to reach their intended goals or that promote unintended effects. For our purposes, it refers to external or procedural factors that inhibit the effective implementation of ASRs. |
Fig 1Visualization of core SWFBs.