Abstract

BackgroundPublication bias, as typically defined, refers to the decreased likelihood of studies' results being published when they are near the null, not statistically significant, or otherwise "less interesting." But choices about how to analyze the data and which results to report create a publication bias within the published results, a bias I label "publication bias in situ" (PBIS).DiscussionPBIS may create much greater bias in the literature than traditionally defined publication bias (the failure to publish any result from a study). The causes of PBIS are well known, consisting of various decisions about reporting that are influenced by the data. But its impact is not generally appreciated, and very little attention is devoted to it. What attention there is consists largely of rules for statistical analysis that are impractical and do not actually reduce the bias in reported estimates. PBIS cannot be reduced by statistical tools because it is not fundamentally a problem of statistics, but rather of non-statistical choices and plain language interpretations. PBIS should be recognized as a phenomenon worthy of study – it is extremely common and probably has a huge impact on results reported in the literature – and there should be greater systematic efforts to identify and reduce it. The paper presents examples, including results of a recent HIV vaccine trial, that show how easily PBIS can have a large impact on reported results, as well as how there can be no simple answer to it.SummaryPBIS is a major problem, worthy of substantially more attention than it receives. There are ways to reduce the bias, but they are very seldom employed because they are largely unrecognized.

Keywords

Publication biasPublicationNull hypothesisStatisticsEconometricsComputer scienceMedicinePsychologyConfidence intervalMathematicsPolitical science

MeSH Terms

AIDS VaccinesChoice BehaviorClinical Trials as TopicData InterpretationStatisticalHumansMeta-Analysis as TopicOdds RatioPublication BiasResearch Personnel

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Publication Info

Year
2004
Type
article
Volume
4
Issue
1
Pages
20-20
Citations
93
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Carl V. Phillips (2004). Publication bias in situ. BMC Medical Research Methodology , 4 (1) , 20-20. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-4-20

Identifiers

DOI
10.1186/1471-2288-4-20
PMID
15296515
PMCID
PMC514545

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%