The publication of scientific articles that receive few or no citations raises questions of the appropriate use of resources as well as ethics. In the case of animal research, the ethics issue extends beyond human patients to nonhuman animals, as the research subjects them to pain and, typically, to death. This study is a citation analysis of animal research conducted at Toronto\u27s Hospital for Sick Children (HSC). Of the 594 publications (1990 to 1995) on animal research by affiliates of HSC, 29% received Iower than 10 citations in a 10-year period. We compare the research history of 13 best and 13 worst HSC scientists. Worst researchers continue to do infrequently cited research. Recommendations indicate how institutions and researc...
Widespread reliance on animal models during preclinical research and toxicity testing assumes their ...
Introduction: The number of research papers and journals each year is increasing and millions of dol...
<div><p>Accumulating evidence indicates high risk of bias in preclinical animal research, questionin...
The publication of scientific articles that receive few or no citations raises questions of the appr...
The present study evaluated for the first time citation-impacts of human research reporting guidelin...
Non-publication and publication bias in animal research is a core topic in current debates on the “r...
This paper analyses the 2555 publications with more than 100 citations indexed in Web of Science und...
The number of non-human animals used in research has increased in line with advances in medical tech...
Publication bias jeopardizes evidence-based medicine, mainly through biased literature syntheses. Pu...
In the last decade the number of bioscience journals has increased enormously, with many filling spe...
Despite abundant focus on responsible care of laboratory animals, we argue that inattention to the m...
Animal welfare scientific literature has accumulated rapidly in recent years, but bias may exist whi...
The published article receives the number of Citations are measure of its impact in the scientific c...
Accumulating evidence indicates high risk of bias in preclinical animal research, questioning the sc...
For scientific, ethical and economic reasons, experiments involving animals should be appropriately ...
Widespread reliance on animal models during preclinical research and toxicity testing assumes their ...
Introduction: The number of research papers and journals each year is increasing and millions of dol...
<div><p>Accumulating evidence indicates high risk of bias in preclinical animal research, questionin...
The publication of scientific articles that receive few or no citations raises questions of the appr...
The present study evaluated for the first time citation-impacts of human research reporting guidelin...
Non-publication and publication bias in animal research is a core topic in current debates on the “r...
This paper analyses the 2555 publications with more than 100 citations indexed in Web of Science und...
The number of non-human animals used in research has increased in line with advances in medical tech...
Publication bias jeopardizes evidence-based medicine, mainly through biased literature syntheses. Pu...
In the last decade the number of bioscience journals has increased enormously, with many filling spe...
Despite abundant focus on responsible care of laboratory animals, we argue that inattention to the m...
Animal welfare scientific literature has accumulated rapidly in recent years, but bias may exist whi...
The published article receives the number of Citations are measure of its impact in the scientific c...
Accumulating evidence indicates high risk of bias in preclinical animal research, questioning the sc...
For scientific, ethical and economic reasons, experiments involving animals should be appropriately ...
Widespread reliance on animal models during preclinical research and toxicity testing assumes their ...
Introduction: The number of research papers and journals each year is increasing and millions of dol...
<div><p>Accumulating evidence indicates high risk of bias in preclinical animal research, questionin...