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en:glossar:replicatio [2023-03-09] – created Sylvia Kurowsky | en:glossar:replicatio [2023-03-16] (current) – [About the terminology] Jens Wittig | ||
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====== Replicating research ====== | ====== Replicating research ====== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== About the terminology ===== | ||
+ | A much-discussed and current problem in many scientific disciplines is the traceability of research. A 2016 survey by the scientific journal Nature (Baker 2016) found that of about 1500 researchers, | ||
+ | The paradigm shift from dominantly hermeneutic to empirical methods also confronts the (digitally working) humanities with new tasks of ensuring their own connectivity to established concepts, questions, and cognitive goals (cf. Schöch 2017). | ||
+ | In the multidimensional dependencies that a repetitive research has on its original study, various definitions can be found in the research literature. Repeatedly mentioned are: Replication, | ||
+ | * the questioning, | ||
+ | * the data, and | ||
+ | * the analytical methods, | ||
+ | and the resulting conceptualizations mentioned. | ||
+ | ^ Schöch 2017, Fig. 1 ^ Question | ||
+ | ^ ^ same ^ different | ||
+ | | **Replication**\\ (of the experiment) | x | | x | | x | | | ||
+ | | **Reanalysis**\\ (of the data) | x | | x | | | x | | ||
+ | | **Reproduction**\\ (of the results) | x | | | x | x | | | ||
+ | | ** Follow-up research **\\ (to the question) | x | | | x | | x | ||
+ | | **Reinterpretation**\\ (of the results) | | x | x | | x | | | ||
+ | | **Reuse**\\ (of the data) | | x | x | | | x | | ||
+ | | **Reuse**\\ (of the code) | | x | | x | x | | | ||
+ | | N/A\\ (no reference) | | x | | x | | x | ||
+ | |||
+ | This form of typology simply describes the relationships between a study and its replication and is not intended to make a distinction in a purely binary way, because data or methods will rarely be completely identical or completely different. The term replication is used in this conceptual outline to refer to the exact repetition of a study. The same research question is addressed again using the same data and the same methods. The latter aspect can lead to slightly different methods of analysis and to a division into direct and conceptual replication: | ||
+ | * direct replication: | ||
+ | * conceptual replication: | ||
+ | Replicability as a requirement is always spoken of when, in a quantitatively operating, scientific approach, the same results are also found in an investigation under the same conditions and using the same method. | ||
+ | |||
+ | References | ||
+ | * Baker, M. 1,500 scientists lift the lid on reproducibility. Nature 533, 452–454 (2016). https:// | ||
+ | * Camerer, Colin F. et al. (2016): „Evaluating replicability of laboratory experiments in economics“, | ||
+ | * Errington, Timothy M. et al. (2021) Investigating the replicability of preclinical cancer biology eLife 10:e71601, https:// | ||
+ | * Gómez, Omar S. & Juristo, Natalia & Vegas, Sira. (2010). Replication, | ||
+ | * Hüffmeier, Joachim & Mazei, Jens & Schultze, Thomas. Reconceptualizing replication as a sequence of different studies: A replication typology, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Volume 66, 2016, Pages 81-92, ISSN 0022-1031, https:// | ||
+ | * Open Science Collaboration | ||
+ | * Schöch, Christof. 2017. “Wiederholende Forschung in den digitalen Geisteswissenschaften.” In Konferenzabstracts DHd2017: Digitale Nachhaltigkeit, | ||
+ | * Schöch, Christof & van Dalen-Oskam, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Repeatability requirements for text-oriented digital methods ===== | ||
+ | * ** Availability of the starting materials **: The digitized corpus should be available in a common, open format (e.g. XML). In this context, open means not only free of technical or legal restrictions, | ||
+ | * configuration variables | ||
+ | * exclusion or inclusion words | ||
+ | * transliterations | ||
+ | * principal part reduction | ||
+ | * translations | ||
+ | * ** Availability of the used tools ** (Ideally all open source): In a broader sense, all applications that were used to process the source material. In the more restricted sense, it includes the corresponding tools in their respective development version. | ||
+ | * operating systems | ||
+ | * programming languages | ||
+ | * databases | ||
+ | * digital working environments (online and offline) | ||
+ | * tool sets | ||
+ | * Custom programming | ||
+ | * **Availability extended data material** (metadata, documentation, | ||
+ | * **Availability of the analysis data**: All data modified or newly created by the tools used should be freely and openly accessible. | ||
+ | * **Availability of documentation of used procedures (algorithms) and data formats**: It is fundamentally important for evaluation and comprehensibility that both the individual process steps (in the case of text processing, for example, these could be: Normalization, | ||
+ | * **Long-term availability of research data and tools**: In the case of direct replication, | ||
+ | |||