| Literature DB >> 32045410 |
Daniel Strech1,2, Tracey Weissgerber1,2, Ulrich Dirnagl1,2.
Abstract
The reproducibility crisis triggered worldwide initiatives to improve rigor, reproducibility, and transparency in biomedical research. There are many examples of scientists, journals, and funding agencies adopting responsible research practices. The QUEST (Quality-Ethics-Open Science-Translation) Center offers a unique opportunity to examine the role of institutions. The Berlin Institute of Health founded QUEST to increase the likelihood that research conducted at this large academic medical center would be trustworthy, useful for scientists and society, and ethical. QUEST researchers perform "science of science" studies to understand problems with standard practices and develop targeted solutions. The staff work with institutional leadership and local scientists to incentivize and support responsible practices in research, funding, and hiring. Some activities described in this paper focus on the institution, whereas others may benefit the national and international scientific community. Our experience, approaches, and recommendations will be informative for faculty leadership, administrators, and researchers interested in improving scientific practice.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32045410 PMCID: PMC7012388 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1The QUEST Center framework for institutional “culture change”.
The figure presents the principles and processes underpinning the rationale for all QUEST activities in line with the European Union principles of RRI. The processes outlined in the figure are examples and are not intended to be comprehensive. RRI, Responsible Research and Innovation; QUEST, Quality-Ethics-Open Science-Translation.
Fig 2Using QUEST services to facilitate behavior change.
The figure illustrates how the approaches used by the QUEST Center (in black) map onto a simple model of behavior change (modified after Michie et al., Implementation Science 2011, 6:42). QUEST, Quality-Ethics-Open Science-Translation.
Examples of tools and resources of interest to the international research community (a more comprehensive and updated list is given at https://osf.io/kqr5y/).
| Resource Name | Details |
|---|---|
| QUEST Toolbox | Find tools, programs, and online platforms for conducting reproducible research at all stages of a research project |
| FIDDLE | This tool is designed to help researchers to get data out of the file drawer and into the scientific literature. Find out where and how to publish data from well-designed experiments that are difficult to publish in traditional journals (i.e., null results, inconclusive results, datasets, etc. [ |
| Digital open science-teaching tool for reproducible and transparent research | An introductory course that guides students toward a reproducible science workflow. Outline of course content and possible extensions, including encountered challenges and a discussion on how to integrate such a course in existing curricula [ |
| ODDPub | We use this tool to automatically screen for open data in all papers by researchers from our institution. We then incentivize data sharing by issuing small monetary rewards to investigators who published papers with open data [ |
| QUEST Criteria | Additional criteria for the assessment of research. These responsible research criteria are used to evaluate professorship candidates and intramural funding applications. We are continuing to develop these criteria based on our experiences with hiring commissions and intramural funding schemes [ |
| GOT-IT | GOT-IT provides a fit-for-purpose, flexible set of guidelines on robust drug target validation. These guidelines are suitable for implementation in an academic setting and include an education program as well as an online expert platform ( |
| LabCIRS | LabCIRS is a simple, free, open-source software tool for implementing a critical incidence and error reporting system in research groups, laboratories, or large institutions [ |
Abbreviations: FIDDLE, File-Drawer Data Liberation Effort; GOT-IT, Guidelines on Target Validation for Innovative Therapeutics; LabCIRS, Laboratory Critical Incident and Error Reporting System; ODDPub, Algorithm for detecting open data in scientific publications; QUEST, Quality-Ethics-Open Science-Translation