Scientific advancement is built on the premise of experimentation and observation followed by the sharing of reliable and credible results. A key aspect of this is that findings should be reproducible and able to be independently validated and verified.
Unfortunately, this is not always the case in the field of medical science, which like many other fields, suffers from the "reproducibility/replicability" crisis whereby a significant number of basic and preclinical studies have failed replicability tests of the scientific methods, with many considered to be irreproducible. This demonstrates the necessity and value to replicate studies, validate computational datasets and statistical models, and independently verify results.
This Research Topic seeks to collect data, opinions, and perspectives exploring the area of reproducibility in Infectious Diseases - covering opinions on the pressures causing the issue, approaches to identifying and avoiding fraudulent research, and improving the rigor and soundness of traditional and widely used research practices and applications. We also aim to stimulate researchers to design and publish works that attempt to reproduce landmark studies.
Scientific advancement is built on the premise of experimentation and observation followed by the sharing of reliable and credible results. A key aspect of this is that findings should be reproducible and able to be independently validated and verified.
Unfortunately, this is not always the case in the field of medical science, which like many other fields, suffers from the "reproducibility/replicability" crisis whereby a significant number of basic and preclinical studies have failed replicability tests of the scientific methods, with many considered to be irreproducible. This demonstrates the necessity and value to replicate studies, validate computational datasets and statistical models, and independently verify results.
This Research Topic seeks to collect data, opinions, and perspectives exploring the area of reproducibility in Infectious Diseases - covering opinions on the pressures causing the issue, approaches to identifying and avoiding fraudulent research, and improving the rigor and soundness of traditional and widely used research practices and applications. We also aim to stimulate researchers to design and publish works that attempt to reproduce landmark studies.