Abstract

To those involved in discussions about rigor, reproducibility, and replication in science, conversation about the "reproducibility crisis" appear ill-structured. Seemingly very different issues concerning the purity of reagents, accessibility of computational code, or misaligned incentives in academic research writ large are all collected up under this label. Prior work has attempted to address this problem by creating analytical definitions of reproducibility. We take a novel empirical, mixed methods approach to understanding variation in reproducibility discussions, using a combination of grounded theory and correspondence analysis to examine how a variety of authors narrate the story of the reproducibility crisis. Contrary to expectations, this analysis demonstrates that there is a clear thematic core to reproducibility discussions, centered on the incentive structure of science, the transparency of methods and data, and the need to reform academic publishing. However, we also identify three clusters of discussion that are distinct from the main body of articles: one focused on reagents, another on statistical methods, and a final cluster focused on the heterogeneity of the natural world. Although there are discursive differences between scientific and popular articles, we find no strong differences in how scientists and journalists write about the reproducibility crisis. Our findings demonstrate the value of using qualitative methods to identify the bounds and features of reproducibility discourse, and identify distinct vocabularies and constituencies that reformers should engage with to promote change.

Highlights

  • A unique characteristic of recent conversations about rigor, reproducibility, and replication is that they are a truly transdisciplinary phenomenon, not confined to any single scientific discipline

  • The first factor plane (Fig 3), representing 16% of the variance, captures two distinctions: Dimension 1 separates articles focused on bench work from articles focused on statistical methods, and Dimension 2 separates articles that focus on technical problems from those that focus on the stakes of the crisis

  • If reproducibility discourse were composed of distinct clusters of conversation, we would expect to see relatively few articles at the origin—the mean article profile would be a theoretical entity representing the average of several clusters distributed across the first factor plane

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A unique characteristic of recent conversations about rigor, reproducibility, and replication is that they are a truly transdisciplinary phenomenon, not confined to any single scientific discipline. A 2016 survey in Nature found that a majority of scientists across a wide range of disciplines had personal experience of failing to reproduce a result, and that a majority of these same scientists believed that science was presently facing a “significant” reproducibility crisis [1]. Reproducibility conversations are unique compared to other methodological. Discursive dimensions of the reproducibility crisis definition for each thematic code and illustrative examples) are available at are available at: https:// github.com/nicole-c-nelson/reproducibility-CA. The NVivo file containing the coded articles is available on request. All code used for analysis is available at: https://github.com/nicole-c-nelson/ reproducibility-CA

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.