
The problem of publication bias — giving higher marks to a paper that reports positive results rather than judging it on its design or methods — plagues the scientific literature. So if reviewers are too focused on the results of a paper, would stripping a paper of its findings solve the problem? That was the question explored in a recent experiment by guest editors of Comparative Political Studies. Mike Findley, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin and one of the guest editors of the journal, talked to us about a new paper explaining what they learned.
Retraction Watch: Can you explain what a “results-free” paper looks and reads like? Continue reading We’re blinded by positive results. So what if we removed them?





A research fellow at Harvard Medical School 
A material science journal has retracted a paper after discovering that the first author faked email addresses for co-authors to submit the paper without their permission.