In this lecture, students consider sources of bias in reporting. Specifically, they begin with an exercise in which they report on the safety of genetically modified organisms, making recommendations based on three primary research articles they were asked to read before coming to class, not realizing that each group was given a different set of articles. This starts a discussion of other sources of bias, including unconscious bias and how it can seep into the fabric of the scientific enterprise as a whole
The present article focuses on a persistent bias observed in evaluating graduation theses and oral p...
Publication bias is the tendency for investigations with primarily nonstatistically significant find...
The communication of research findings is one of our most important functions. Not communicating res...
In this lecture, students consider sources of bias in reporting. Specifically, they begin with an e...
In this lecture, through class discussions about assigned readings and a TEDx Talk, students explore...
Reporting of research findings is often selective. This threatens the validity of the published body...
This animation explains four major forms of bias that can occur in the scientific literature: public...
We expect every research study to have some inherent random error because samples cannot exactly ref...
Reporting of research findings is often selective. This threatens the validity of the published body...
A one-of-a-kind resource on identifying and dealing with bias in statistical research on causal effe...
This lesson is designed to help students recognize and deal with bias which may be found in scientif...
The quality of a clinical study depends on internal and external factors. Studies have internal vali...
There has been remarkably little demonstration of the deleterious impact of publication bias within ...
This article is part of a series featured from the Catalogue of Bias introduced in this volume of BM...
Created by Richard W. Madsen of the University of Missouri--Columbia, the following exercise can ill...
The present article focuses on a persistent bias observed in evaluating graduation theses and oral p...
Publication bias is the tendency for investigations with primarily nonstatistically significant find...
The communication of research findings is one of our most important functions. Not communicating res...
In this lecture, students consider sources of bias in reporting. Specifically, they begin with an e...
In this lecture, through class discussions about assigned readings and a TEDx Talk, students explore...
Reporting of research findings is often selective. This threatens the validity of the published body...
This animation explains four major forms of bias that can occur in the scientific literature: public...
We expect every research study to have some inherent random error because samples cannot exactly ref...
Reporting of research findings is often selective. This threatens the validity of the published body...
A one-of-a-kind resource on identifying and dealing with bias in statistical research on causal effe...
This lesson is designed to help students recognize and deal with bias which may be found in scientif...
The quality of a clinical study depends on internal and external factors. Studies have internal vali...
There has been remarkably little demonstration of the deleterious impact of publication bias within ...
This article is part of a series featured from the Catalogue of Bias introduced in this volume of BM...
Created by Richard W. Madsen of the University of Missouri--Columbia, the following exercise can ill...
The present article focuses on a persistent bias observed in evaluating graduation theses and oral p...
Publication bias is the tendency for investigations with primarily nonstatistically significant find...
The communication of research findings is one of our most important functions. Not communicating res...