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Mapping the discursive dimensions of the reproducibility crisis: A mixed methods analysis

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...

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Published in:PloS one 2021-07, Vol.16 (7), p.e0254090-e0254090
Main Authors: Nelson, Nicole C, Ichikawa, Kelsey, Chung, Julie, Malik, Momin M
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description 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.
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subjects Audiences
Authorship
Biology and Life Sciences
Computer applications
Crises
Data collection
Datasets
Discipline
Empirical analysis
Factor Analysis, Statistical
Heterogeneity
Humans
Identification methods
Incentives
Information management
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mixed methods research
Narratives
People and Places
Physical Sciences
Qualitative research
Reagents
Reproducibility
Reproducibility of Results
Research - standards
Research and Analysis Methods
Research methodology
Scholarly publishing
Science Policy
Scientists
Social Sciences
Statistical methods
title Mapping the discursive dimensions of the reproducibility crisis: A mixed methods analysis
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