| Literature DB >> 35164834 |
Emma Ganley1, Anne-Marie Coriat2, Sarah Shenow3, David Prosser4.
Abstract
Various factors contribute to low reproducibility and replicability of scientific findings. Whilst not all of these are necessarily problematic, there is growing acceptance that there is room for improvement. Many sectoral organisations have a role to play in this, by refining incentives and rewards, promoting specific behaviours such as open research practices, and exploring innovations in grant funding and scientific publishing. However, given the systems nature of the challenge, real change will require the coordination of these efforts, and partnerships that ensure alignment of activity and interoperability of training. Efforts to improve research quality will require investment, in infrastructure, training, and research on research to ensure that innovative solutions are evidence-based, and potential unintended consequences are explored (and avoided). National structures (e.g., the planned UK Committee on Research Integrity) should focus on understanding the research system, identifying areas for improvement, and promoting research to understand the impact of novel approaches and innovations, in order to advise on how to maximise benefit and avoid harm.Entities:
Keywords: Replicability; Reproducibility; Research quality; UKRN
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35164834 PMCID: PMC8842915 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-022-05932-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
The UKRN Stakeholder Engagement Group (as of Jan 14th 2022)
| THE UKRN Stakeholder Engagement Group | |
| Full stakeholders, who provide direct funding for UKRN activities, as well as support in kind | Academy of Medical Sciences The Arts & Humanities Research Council Cancer Research UK The Economic and Social Research Council Jisc The Medical Research Council MQ: transforming mental health The Natural Environment Research Council Research England United Kingdom Research and Innovation UK Research Integrity Office The Wellcome Trust |
| Affiliate Stakeholders, who we work with collaboratively and who provide support in kind for UKRN activities | The Association of Research Managers & Administrators The British Neuroscience Association The British Psychological Society The CHDI Foundation Code Ocean CLOSER The European Bioinformatics Institute EBSCO F1000 Research FAIRsharing The Institute of Physics The NC3Rs The National Institute for Biological Standards and Control The National Physical Laboratory Nature Publishing Group Public Library of Science Project TIER protocols.io Research Libraries UK The Royal Society of Biology The Software Sustainability Institute The UK Data Service The UK Research Staff Association Universities UK Wiley |