A commentary on research rigour in clinical psychological science: How to avoid throwing out the innovation baby with the research credibility bath water in the depression field
Dunn, BD; O'Mahen, H; Wright, K; et al.Brown, G
Date: 5 June 2019
Article
Journal
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Proponents of the research credibility movement make a number of recommendations
to enhance research rigour in psychology. These represent positive advances and can enhance
replicability in clinical psychological science. This article evaluates whether there are any
risks associated with this movement. We argue that there is the ...
Proponents of the research credibility movement make a number of recommendations
to enhance research rigour in psychology. These represent positive advances and can enhance
replicability in clinical psychological science. This article evaluates whether there are any
risks associated with this movement. We argue that there is the potential for research
credibility principles to stifle innovation and exacerbate type II error, but only if they are
applied too rigidly and beyond their intended scope by funders, journals and scientists. We
outline ways to mitigate these risks. Further, we discuss how research credibility issues need
to be situated within broader concerns about research waste. A failure to optimise the process
by which basic science findings are used to inform the development of novel treatments (the
first translational gap) and effective treatments are then implemented in real-world settings
(the second translational gap) are also significant sources of research waste in depression. We
make some suggestions about how to better cross these translational gaps.
Psychology - old structure
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