Our social media feeds are full of articles shared by friends and family that make claims about how something can prevent a particular health condition. But how robust is the scientific evidence base underpinning these claims? Noah Haber, Alexander Breskin, Ellen Moscoe and Emily R. Smith, on behalf of the CLAIMS team, report on a systematic review of the state of causal inference in media articles and academic studies at the point of consumption on social media. There is a large disparity between what people see in social media about health research compared with the underlying strength of evidence, both in the studies themselves and in the media articles describing their findings. The studies tend to imply stronger causal inference than t...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
One of the principal ways in which research can be said to have had an impact on society is when it ...
This article reports on the analysis of an online forum on the UK’s National Health Service website ...
As the value of research with impact increases, so too does the importance of first gaining access t...
Despite the near-constant clamour to do so, many academics remain understandably reluctant to use so...
In their previous Impact Blog post, Katy Jordan and Mark Carrigan considered whether institutions ha...
In The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media, Jeremy Weissman explores the...
The journey from evidence to policy is inevitably complex and frequently becomes divisive as argumen...
There is no doubt that good communications and framing research and evidence for your audience is im...
Academics looking to communicate the findings and value of their research to wider audiences are inc...
Population health policies stand a much better chance of succeeding if they’re informed by research ...
Only a small fraction of research misconduct ever comes to light. Independent investigative bodies c...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
The increased focus on impact in research evaluation represents a range of possibilities and pressur...
It has become increasingly clear that prevailing academic incentive structures have a potentially da...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
One of the principal ways in which research can be said to have had an impact on society is when it ...
This article reports on the analysis of an online forum on the UK’s National Health Service website ...
As the value of research with impact increases, so too does the importance of first gaining access t...
Despite the near-constant clamour to do so, many academics remain understandably reluctant to use so...
In their previous Impact Blog post, Katy Jordan and Mark Carrigan considered whether institutions ha...
In The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media, Jeremy Weissman explores the...
The journey from evidence to policy is inevitably complex and frequently becomes divisive as argumen...
There is no doubt that good communications and framing research and evidence for your audience is im...
Academics looking to communicate the findings and value of their research to wider audiences are inc...
Population health policies stand a much better chance of succeeding if they’re informed by research ...
Only a small fraction of research misconduct ever comes to light. Independent investigative bodies c...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
The increased focus on impact in research evaluation represents a range of possibilities and pressur...
It has become increasingly clear that prevailing academic incentive structures have a potentially da...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
One of the principal ways in which research can be said to have had an impact on society is when it ...
This article reports on the analysis of an online forum on the UK’s National Health Service website ...