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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preregistration (science) | 1/4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preregistration_(science) | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T03:50:00.803493+00:00 | kb-cron |
Preregistration is the practice of registering the hypotheses, methods, or analyses of a scientific study before it is conducted. Clinical trial registration is similar, although it may not require the registration of a study's analysis protocol. Finally, registered reports include the peer review and in principle acceptance of a study protocol prior to data collection. Preregistration has the goal to transparently evaluate the severity of hypothesis tests, and can have a number of secondary goals (which can also be achieved without preregistering ), including (a) facilitating and documenting research plans, (b) identifying and reducing questionable research practices and researcher biases, (c) distinguishing between confirmatory and exploratory analyses, and, in the case of Registered Reports, (d) facilitating results-blind peer review, and (e) reducing publication bias. Although the idea of preregistration is old, the practice of preregistering studies has gained prominence to mitigate certain issues that contribute to the replication crisis in scientific studies. Among others, these issues include publication bias and questionable research practices, such as p-hacking and HARKing.
== Types ==
=== Standard preregistration === In the standard preregistration format, researchers prepare a research protocol document prior to conducting their research. Ideally, this document indicates the research hypotheses, sampling procedure, sample size, research design, testing conditions, stimuli, measures, data coding and aggregation method, criteria for data exclusions, and statistical analyses, including potential variations on those analyses. This preregistration document is then posted on a publicly available website such as the Open Science Framework or AsPredicted. The preregistered study is then conducted, and a report of the study and its results are submitted for publication together with access to the preregistration document. This preregistration approach allows peer reviewers and subsequent readers to cross-reference the preregistration document with the published research article in order to identify the presence of any opportunistic deviations of the preregistration that reduce the severity of tests. Deviations from the preregistration are possible and common in practice, but they should be transparently reported, and the consequences for the severity of the test should be evaluated.
=== Registered reports === The registered report format requires authors to submit a description of the study methods and analyses prior to data collection. Once the theoretical introduction, method, and analysis plan has been peer reviewed (Stage 1 peer review), publication of the findings is provisionally guaranteed (in principle acceptance). The proposed study is then performed, and the research report is submitted for Stage 2 peer review. Stage 2 peer review confirms that the actual research methods are consistent with the preregistered protocol, that quality thresholds are met (e.g., manipulation checks confirm the validity of the experimental manipulation), and that the conclusions follow from the data. Because studies are accepted for publication regardless of whether the results are statistically significant Registered Reports prevent publication bias. Meta-scientific research has shown that the percentage of non-significant results in Registered Reports is substantially higher than in standard publications.
=== Specialized preregistration === Preregistration can be used in relation to a variety of different research designs and methods, including:
Adaptive preregistration Quantitative research in psychology Qualitative research Preexisting data Single case designs Electroencephalogram research Experience sampling Exploratory research Animal Research
== Clinical trial registration == Clinical trial registration is the practice of documenting clinical trials before they are performed in a clinical trials registry so as to combat publication bias and selective reporting. Registration of clinical trials is required in some countries and is increasingly being standardized. Some top medical journals will only publish the results of trials that have been pre-registered. A clinical trials registry is a platform which catalogs registered clinical trials. ClinicalTrials.gov, run by the United States National Library of Medicine (NLM) was the first online registry for clinical trials, and remains the largest and most widely used. In addition to combating bias, clinical trial registries serve to increase transparency and access to clinical trials for the public. Clinical trials registries are often searchable (e.g. by disease/indication, drug, location, etc.). Trials are registered by the pharmaceutical, biotech or medical device company (Sponsor) or by the hospital or foundation which is sponsoring the study, or by another organization, such as a contract research organization (CRO) which is running the study. There has been a push from governments and international organizations, especially since 2005, to make clinical trial information more widely available and to standardize registries and processes of registering. The World Health Organization is working toward "achieving consensus on both the minimal and the optimal operating standards for trial registration".