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 Merit ===== **Scientific merit** refers to the **overall value, credibility, and potential impact** of a research study, based on the **quality of its methodology, originality, rigor, and relevance** to the scientific community. ==== Core Components ==== * **Clarity of Purpose** > Is the research question well-defined, relevant, and original? * **Methodological Rigor** > Are the design, data collection, and analysis methods robust, reproducible, and appropriate? * **Validity of Results** > Are the results reliable, statistically sound, and logically interpreted? * **Relevance and Impact** > Does the study meaningfully advance knowledge in its field or influence future research, policy, or clinical practice? * **Ethical Standards** > Were ethical guidelines and responsible research practices followed? ==== Indicators of Low Scientific Merit ==== * Poor or unclear study design * Small or biased sample size * Misuse or absence of statistical controls * Overinterpretation of exploratory findings * Lack of replication or transparency ==== Summary ==== > **Scientific merit** is the foundation for judging whether a study is **worth publishing, funding, or building upon**. It separates **robust science** from **decorated speculation**. scientific_merit.txt Last modified: 2025/06/17 06:52by administrador