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Claims of Causality in Health News: a Randomised Trial

Claims of Causality in Health News: a Randomised Trial

Misleading news claims can be detrimental to public health. We aimed to improve the alignment between causal claims and evidence, without losing news interest (counter to assumptions that news is not interested in communicating caution). We tested two interventions in press releases, which are the main sources for science and health news: (a) aligning the headlines and main causal claims with the underlying evidence (strong for experimental, cautious for correlational) and (b) inserting explicit statements/caveats about inferring causality. The 'participants' were press releases on health-related topics (N = 312; control = 89, claim alignment = 64, causality statement = 79, both = 80) from nine press offices (journals, universities, funders). Outcomes were news content (headlines, causal claims, caveats) in English-language international and national media (newspapers, websites, broadcast; N = 2257), news uptake (% press releases gaining news coverage) and feasibility (% press releases implementing cautious statements). News headlines showed better alignment to evidence when press releases were aligned (intention-to-treat analysis (ITT) 56% vs 52%, OR = 1.2 to 1.9; as-treated analysis (AT) 60% vs 32%, OR = 1.3 to 4.4). News claims also followed press releases, significant only for AT (ITT 62% vs 60%, OR = 0.7 to 1.6; AT, 67% vs 39%, OR = 1.4 to 5.7). The same was true for causality statements/caveats (ITT 15% vs 10%, OR = 0.9 to 2.6; AT 20% vs 0%, OR 16 to 156). There was no evidence of lost news uptake for press releases with aligned headlines and claims (ITT 55% vs 55%, OR = 0.7 to 1.3, AT 58% vs 60%, OR = 0.7 to 1.7), or causality statements/caveats (ITT 53% vs 56%, OR = 0.8 to 1.0, AT 66% vs 52%, OR = 1.3 to 2.7). Feasibility was demonstrated by a spontaneous increase in cautious headlines, claims and caveats in press releases compared to the pre-trial period (OR = 1.01 to 2.6, 1.3 to 3.4, 1.1 to 26, respectively). News claims-even headlines-can become better aligned with evidence. Cautious claims and explicit caveats about correlational findings may penetrate into news without harming news interest. Findings from AT analysis are correlational and may not imply cause, although here the linking mechanism between press releases and news is known. ITT analysis was insensitive due to spontaneous adoption of interventions across conditions. ISRCTN10492618 (20 August 2015)

Why the Guardian is Changing the Language It Uses About the Environment

Why the Guardian is Changing the Language It Uses About the Environment

From now, house style guide recommends terms such as 'climate crisis' and 'global heating'.

Aim and Scope - SURE Journal

Aim and Scope - SURE Journal

The Series of Unsurprising Results in Economics (SURE) is an e-journal of high-quality research with "unsurprising" findings. We publish scientifically important and carefully-executed studies with statistically insignificant or otherwise unsurprising results. Studies from all fields of Economics will be considered. SURE is an open-access journal and there are no submission charges. SURE benefits readers by: Mitigating the … Continue reading Aim and Scope →

UK Commits to International Research and Innovation Strategy

UK Commits to International Research and Innovation Strategy

New International Research and Innovation Strategy launched to ensure the UK remains a global leader in science.

Rethinking Impact Factors: New Pathways in Journal Metrics

Rethinking Impact Factors: New Pathways in Journal Metrics

Diversity, transparency, and reliability are essential principles to ensure that a proliferation of metrics does not distort the scholarly communication system, but leads to more granular and transparent assessments

EIFL's Open Science Training is Advancing Openness in Science and Research

EIFL's Open Science Training is Advancing Openness in Science and Research

The two-page brochure describes the impact of Electronic Information for Libraries' (EIFL) open science training at universities and research institutes in Africa and Europe.  

Registered Reports: Peer Review Before Results Are Known to Align Scientific Values and Practices

Registered Reports: Peer Review Before Results Are Known to Align Scientific Values and Practices

Registered Reports emphasize the importance of the research question and the quality of methodology by conducting peer review prior to data collection. High quality protocols are then provisionally accepted for publication if the authors follow through with the registered methodology.

The Death of the Literature Review and the Rise of the Dynamic Knowledge Map

The Death of the Literature Review and the Rise of the Dynamic Knowledge Map

Almost every academic article starts with a literature review. However, although these short research summaries can be beneficial they also introduce opportunities for unverifiable misrepresentation and self-aggrandizement.

AmeliCA Celebrates Invest in Open Infrastructure Birth

AmeliCA Celebrates Invest in Open Infrastructure Birth

Open Knowledge for Latin America and the Global south (AmeliCA) is pleased to be part of this initiative that furthers an open, scalable, long-lasting scientific infrastructure that seeks to spread its benefits worldwide.

Measuring Inequality - Creating an Indicator to Assess Gender Bias in Universities

Measuring Inequality - Creating an Indicator to Assess Gender Bias in Universities

This article presents a new initiative from the Centre for Science and Technology Studies at Leiden (CWTS), to assess gender inequality in research publication across different institutions internationally and drive further change in the sector.

To Meet the 'Plan S' Open-Access Mandate, Journals Mull Setting Papers Free at Publication

To Meet the 'Plan S' Open-Access Mandate, Journals Mull Setting Papers Free at Publication

Some publishers are considering an approach they hope will both comply with "Plan S" and maintain their subscription income: allowing authors to post manuscripts in public archives as soon as their papers are published.

Ten Hot Topics Around Scholarly Publishing

Ten Hot Topics Around Scholarly Publishing

This article provides a baseline evidence framework for ten of the most contested topics in scholarly publishing, in order to help frame and move forward discussions, practices, and policies.

Data Sharing and How It Can Benefit Your Scientific Career

Data Sharing and How It Can Benefit Your Scientific Career

Open science can lead to greater collaboration, increased confidence in findings and goodwill between researchers.

Open and Closed - What Do Reverse Flips Tell Us About the Scholarly Publishing Landscape?

Open and Closed - What Do Reverse Flips Tell Us About the Scholarly Publishing Landscape?

The progress of Open Access (OA) is often measured by the proportion of journals that have transitioned to OA publication models. However, a number of journals have made the opposite choice and moved from open to closed access.

Speeding Up the Publication Process at PLOS ONE | EveryONE: The PLOS ONE Blog

Speeding Up the Publication Process at PLOS ONE | EveryONE: The PLOS ONE Blog

At PLOS ONE we like to speed up the publication process wherever we can. We like science to be out in the open, and publication of peer-reviewed research to take place without undue delays, so that others can use and build upon the findings. Aligned with our founding mission, we aim to be as fast as we can while remaining true to our publication criteria and without compromising the quality of the peer review process.

Expert Advice on How to Prepare a Perfect Funding Application

Expert Advice on How to Prepare a Perfect Funding Application

Expert advice on how to prepare a perfect funding application

The Statistics Skirmishes

The Statistics Skirmishes

"Today I speak to you of war. A war that has pitted statistician against statistician for nearly 100 years. A mathematical conflict that has recently come to the attention of the ‘normal’ people."

6 Innovations from the Humanities That Make Open Access Publishing a Reality to Everyone

6 Innovations from the Humanities That Make Open Access Publishing a Reality to Everyone

Some of the most successful free-to-publish Open Access endeavors have been emerging from arts and humanities in response to the particular needs of the humanities scholars concerning publishing formats, academic evaluation, and funding availability.