Abstract

BackgroundA proposal to encourage the preregistration of research on research integrity was developed and adopted as the Amsterdam Agenda at the 5th World Conference on Research Integrity (Amsterdam, 2017). This paper reports on the degree to which abstracts of the 6th World Conference in Research Integrity (Hong Kong, 2019) reported on preregistered research.MethodsConference registration data on participants presenting a paper or a poster at 6th WCRI were made available to the research team. Because the data set was too small for inferential statistics this report is limited to a basic description of results and some recommendations that should be considered when taking further steps to improve preregistration.Results19% of the 308 presenters preregistered their research. Of the 56 usable cases, less than half provided information on the six key elements of the Amsterdam Agenda. Others provided information that invalidated their data, such as an uninformative URL. There was no discernable difference between qualitative and quantitative research.ConclusionsSome presenters at the WCRI have preregistered their research on research integrity, but further steps are needed to increase frequency and completeness of preregistration. One approach to increase preregistration would be to make it a requirement for research presented at the World Conferences on Research Integrity.

Highlights

  • A proposal to encourage the preregistration of research on research integrity was developed and adopted as the Amsterdam Agenda at the 5th World Conference on Research Integrity (Amsterdam, 2017)

  • Preregistration can vary from a minimum set of details on the study at issue to a full study protocol, with or without a complete data-analysis plan

  • We note that the Amsterdam Agenda called for preregistering research on research integrity, and suggested to do so in the Registry for Research on the Responsible Conduct of Research

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Summary

Introduction

A proposal to encourage the preregistration of research on research integrity was developed and adopted as the Amsterdam Agenda at the 5th World Conference on Research Integrity (Amsterdam, 2017). This paper reports on the degree to which abstracts of the 6th World Conference in Research Integrity (Hong Kong, 2019) reported on preregistered research. The purpose of this study was to assess the degree to which paper and poster presenters at the 6th World Conference on Research Integrity The AA was developed and adopted at the 5th WCRI ([16]; https://wcrif.org/wcri2017) and recommended for use in research on research integrity. KS analysed the compliance with the AA of the authors of papers and posters accepted for the 6th WCRI (www.wcrif.org/images/2019/PDF/Abstract_book.pdf) and presented his findings during the final plenary session of the conference. No one followed that second recommendation and in hindsight, it seems not to be a good idea to have a separate registry for one specific type of study. What is considered as research on research integrity is somewhat a moving target, probably many would agree that its description by the WCRF Foundation (www.wcrif. org/foundation/mission) accurately characterizes the current situation

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