Transparency And Open Science Principles In Reporting Guidelines In Sleep Research And Chronobiology Journals [Version 1; Peer Review: 3 Approved With Reservations]

Manuel Spitschan, Marlene H. Schmidt, Christine Blume

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: "Open science" is an umbrella term describing various aspects of transparent and open science practices. The adoption of practices at different levels of the scientific process (e.g., individual researchers, laboratories, institutions) has been rapidly changing the scientific research landscape in the past years, but their uptake differs from discipline to discipline. Here, we asked to what extent journals in the field of sleep research and chronobiology encourage or even require following transparent and open science principles in their author guidelines. Methods: We scored the author guidelines of a comprehensive set of 28 sleep and chronobiology journals, including the major outlets in the field, using the standardised Transparency and Openness (TOP) Factor. This instrument rates the extent to which journals encourage or require following various aspects of open science, including data citation, data transparency, analysis code transparency, materials transparency, design and analysis guidelines, study pre-registration, analysis plan pre-registration, replication, registered reports, and the use of open science badges. Results: Across the 28 journals, we find low values on the TOP Factor (median [25th, 75th percentile] 2.5 [1, 3], min. 0, max. 9, out of a total possible score of 28) in sleep research and chronobiology journals. Conclusions: Our findings suggest an opportunity for sleep research and chronobiology journals to further support the recent developments in transparent and open science by implementing transparency and openness principles in their guidelines and making adherence to them mandatory.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-25
Number of pages25
JournalWellcome Open Research
Volume5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • chronobiology
  • circadian rhythms
  • meta research
  • open science
  • publishing
  • sleep

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