BACKGROUND: In medical practice, clinically unexpected measurements might be quite properly handled by the remeasurement, removal, or reclassification of patients. If these habits are not prevented during clinical research, how much of each is needed to sway an entire study? METHODS AND RESULTS: Believing there is a difference between groups, a well-intentioned clinician researcher addresses unexpected values. We tested how much removal, remeasurement, or reclassification of patients would be needed in most cases to turn an otherwise-neutral study positive. Remeasurement of 19 patients out of 200 per group was required to make most studies positive. Removal was more powerful: just 9 out of 200 was enough. Reclassification was most powerful,...
Research misconduct can arise In any area of research and can discredit the findings. Research misco...
The results of good randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in leading peer-reviewed journals ...
There is increasing concern that most current published research findings are false. The probability...
In medical practice, clinically unexpected measurements might be quite properly handled by the remea...
BACKGROUND: In medical practice, clinically unexpected measurements might be quite properly handled ...
Evidence-based medicine frequently uses statistical hypothesis testing. In this paradigm, data can o...
Evidence-based medicine frequently uses statistical hypothesis testing. In this paradigm, data can o...
Abstract One area of biomedical research where the replication crisis is most visible and consequent...
Evidence of unexplained discrepancies between planned and conducted statistical analyses: a review o...
BACKGROUND: Choosing or altering the planned statistical analysis approach after examination of tria...
Part 3 of the article. With few exceptions, top scientists publish fewer, but much more important p...
Objective: The use of minimum clinically important difference in the hypothesis formulation for sup...
Background: A large number of statistical fallacies occur in medical research literature. These are ...
In conducting and reporting of medical research, there are some common pitfalls in using statistical...
A recent article in this journal (Ioannidis JP (2005) Why most published research findings are false...
Research misconduct can arise In any area of research and can discredit the findings. Research misco...
The results of good randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in leading peer-reviewed journals ...
There is increasing concern that most current published research findings are false. The probability...
In medical practice, clinically unexpected measurements might be quite properly handled by the remea...
BACKGROUND: In medical practice, clinically unexpected measurements might be quite properly handled ...
Evidence-based medicine frequently uses statistical hypothesis testing. In this paradigm, data can o...
Evidence-based medicine frequently uses statistical hypothesis testing. In this paradigm, data can o...
Abstract One area of biomedical research where the replication crisis is most visible and consequent...
Evidence of unexplained discrepancies between planned and conducted statistical analyses: a review o...
BACKGROUND: Choosing or altering the planned statistical analysis approach after examination of tria...
Part 3 of the article. With few exceptions, top scientists publish fewer, but much more important p...
Objective: The use of minimum clinically important difference in the hypothesis formulation for sup...
Background: A large number of statistical fallacies occur in medical research literature. These are ...
In conducting and reporting of medical research, there are some common pitfalls in using statistical...
A recent article in this journal (Ioannidis JP (2005) Why most published research findings are false...
Research misconduct can arise In any area of research and can discredit the findings. Research misco...
The results of good randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in leading peer-reviewed journals ...
There is increasing concern that most current published research findings are false. The probability...