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Why Most Published Research Findings Are False

0 responses
complex experiments require advanced statistics Posted by lazarillo on 27 Jun 2011 at 23:08 GMT
Most recent response on 27 Jun 2011 at 23:08 GMT
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true existing relationships to true non-existent relationships Posted by lazarillo on 27 Jun 2011 at 22:52 GMT
Most recent response on 27 Jun 2011 at 22:52 GMT
4 responses
Why most published research findings are true but so many are useless Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:51 GMT
Most recent response on 17 Apr 2011 at 23:30 GMT
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p values for significance must be more strict (as p=<0.005) to decrease false positives Posted by sogino on 10 Mar 2011 at 16:12 GMT
Most recent response on 10 Mar 2011 at 16:12 GMT
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Why Most Published Research Findings Are False Posted by keithkojo on 14 Jan 2010 at 10:17 GMT
Most recent response on 14 Jan 2010 at 10:17 GMT
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This only applies for p-values not corrected for multiple testing Posted by barwil on 13 Oct 2009 at 12:10 GMT
Most recent response on 13 Oct 2009 at 12:10 GMT
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Open Access and the Skewness of Science: It Can't Be Cream All the Way Down Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:31 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:31 GMT
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Why most published research findings are false Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
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Healthy Skepticism Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
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Responce Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
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Truth Is Hard to Find Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:15 GMT
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Let Truth Bare Sway Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
0 responses
My Opinion Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
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Independent Teams Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
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Greek Common Sense Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:14 GMT
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Why Most Published Research Findings Are False: How about Functional Brain Mapping? Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:10 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:10 GMT
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In reply Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
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Problems in the underlying analysis Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
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Medicine only? Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:06 GMT
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Multiple research teams with multiple research findings Posted by plosmedicine on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:00 GMT
Most recent response on 31 Mar 2009 at 00:00 GMT
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Title of paper is erroneous: most published studies are not false Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:58 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:58 GMT
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Error in "Why most published research findings are false" Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:46 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:46 GMT
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Power, Reliability and Heterogeneous Results Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:46 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:46 GMT
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Clinical trials on human subjects can never be definitively conclusive Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
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Truth, probability and frameworks Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
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The Clinical Interpretation of Research Posted by plosmedicine on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
Most recent response on 30 Mar 2009 at 23:45 GMT
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