Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Scientific credibility ====== Scientific [[credibility]] refers to the perceived trustworthiness, rigor, and reliability of a researcher, publication, institution, or scientific claim. 🔬 Key components include: Methodological soundness: Use of validated, reproducible, and transparent methods Data integrity: Accurate, honest, and complete reporting of results Peer recognition: Acceptance by the scientific community through peer-reviewed publications Reproducibility: Findings can be independently confirmed Transparency: Disclosure of limitations, conflicts of interest, and uncertainties ⚠️ Loss of scientific credibility can result from: Flawed or manipulated data Overinterpretation or hype Retractions or irreproducible results Conflicts of interest not disclosed Lack of ethical standards In short: Scientific credibility is the currency of trust in research—easy to spend, hard to regain. scientific_credibility.txt Last modified: 2025/06/17 10:05by administrador