Point of View: Beware ‘persuasive communication devices’ when writing and reading scientific articles
Tables
Table 1
Persuasive communication devices.
Device | Description | |
---|---|---|
Category: Mischaracterizing the state-of-the-art | ||
1 | Ignoring previous work | Not citing previous work that decreases the perceived novelty of the current work. |
2 | One-sided citation | Mostly or only citing supportive research, and mostly or completely ignoring research that does not support the author’s point of view. |
3 | Reliance on weak evidence | Citing work that is now known to be weak or wrong. |
4 | Misleading use of references | Citing papers that are not relevant to the point the author is trying to make in order to give the impression that support for this point is stronger than it actually is. |
5 | Missing evidence | Making statements that are not backed up with citations. |
Category: Overselling | ||
6 | Excessive titles | Using titles which make claims that go beyond the findings being reported. |
7 | Overgeneralization | Generalizing results beyond the population studied without evidence to support such claims. |
8 | Hype | Using adjectives such as striking, important, remarkable and so on without justification. |
9 | Selective reporting | Not reporting findings that would make the article ‘weaker‘; not reporting hypotheses that have been tested and ruled out. |
10 | Hypothesizing after the results are known (HARKing). | Giving the impression that a hypothesis was formulated before data were collected, when it was formulated after data collection. |
Category: Smoke screening and deflection | ||
11 | Inconsistent terminology | Being inconsistent in the use of terminology across papers – and sometimes within a paper –in order to avoid scrutiny. |
12 | Selective quotation | Selectively quoting other work, or citing other work out of context, in order to make a point. |
13 | Straw-person argument | Exaggerating or distorting other work in order to easily refute it. |
14 | Cryptic writing | Writing in a way intended to make an article unnecessarily difficult for readers to understand in order to impress them and prevent a fair assessment of the work being reported. |
15 | (Supplementary) information overload | Overwhelming the reader with poorly organized supporting materials, if done to prevent close scrutiny. |
16 | Limiting what is said about limitations | Seeking to downplay or hide the limitations of a study. |
17 | Ambiguity | Using words which suggest more than what the study delivered. |
18 | Selective appeal for rigor | Requiring higher standards of evidence from researchers with a different or competing perspective. |
19 | Open research washing | Engaging in ‘open research‘ practices in a superficial manner in order to boost the perceived robustness of work. |
Category: Misuse of authority (and authors) | ||
20 | Reliance on precedent | Suggesting that a procedure with known flaws is suitable for a study because it has been used in lots of previous studies. |
21 | Reliance on number of citations | Arguing that because previous work has received lots of citations, an area of research – and hence the current work – is important and of high quality. |
22 | Honorary authorship | Including a well-known researcher in the author list – even though they do not meet the relevant criteria for being an author – in order to increase the chances of the manuscript being accepted for publication. |
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Point of View: Beware ‘persuasive communication devices’ when writing and reading scientific articles
eLife 12:e88654.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.88654