Whether one has heard of a concept or not depends on where one has been
looking. The phrase has definitely been discussed in literature across
disciplines. Consider these database search results. Also remember
discussion of the phrase does not mean that research is ever, often or
always considered reliable by scholars, but the concept is discussed and
with the amount of discussion of research in this context, it is likely
that there are believers out there that think some research is reliable.
Google Scholar
About 16,800 results
http://tinyurl.com/hkwjqy4
The result is reliable research. Right? Wrong. ...
intervention procedures and reliable research data
Rapid and reliable research methods for practicing anthropologists
Desirable changes within the legal system will occur only if clear policy
objectives are established, reliable research is conducted, and data about
rape are brought forward.
[BOOK] Cults and new religious movements: a reader LL Dawson - 2003 -
uni-marburg.de ... 5). In contrast to the study of other religious
phenomena, Dawson regards a scientific response to issues raised in public
above all by the media in connection with NRMs as the task for the
researcher, out of a belief in letting the record of reliable research
speak for itself.
The most reliable research information is derived from prospective
longitudinal studies that follow same-age cohorts of children from birth,
or an early age, into adolescence and adulthood.
There is little reliable research to support these claims, other than that
which has shown body-cameras reduce untruthful complaints against police
and can be a useful training tool.
While nurses and other health-care professionals must attend to
understanding the cultural aspects of health and healing, there is little
published valid and reliable research to assist with this, especially with
respect to specific populations
[PDF] Reliable research: Towards experimental standards for computer
science
[BOOK] Tough is not enough: Getting smart about youth crime: A review of
research on what works to reduce offending by young people KL McLaren -
2000 - ncjrs.gov ... at risk of offending. The most recent and reliable
research on the issue is reviewed to identify the profiles of juveniles
who should be selected for intervention to prevent the evolution of a
criminal career.
Assessing ethics of trials in systematic reviews MA Weingarten, M Paul -
BMJ: British Medical , 2004 - search.proquest.com ... 767 randomised
controlled trials published during 1993-5 in the New England Journal of
Medicine, Lancet, BMJ, and JAMA, trials of higher methodological quality
were more likely to provide information about their ethical aspects; so it
seems that more reliable research is also ...
The food industry needs reliable research methods for the evaluation of
every new option before considering clinical trials.
Are children reliable reporters? B Herjanic, M Herjanic, F Brown, T Wheatt
- Journal of Abnormal Child , 1975 - Springer ... We hope that through the
use of the method described in the present study on a much larger sample,
a set of criteria could be proposed in the future that would lead to more
reliable research on psychiatric disorders and problems occurring in
childhood. REFERENCES ...
---------------------------------------------------
Google Books
23,100
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=%22reliable+research%22
Titles Like:
Soundings: rapid and reliable research methods for practicing ...
Management Research Methods
Best Research Practices
Marketing Research -
Researching Vocabulary: A Vocabulary Research Manual
The Craft of Research, Third Edition
---------------------------------------------------
Summon
http://tinyurl.com/hbapakq
16,572 results
Archival Material (6) Include Exclude
Audio Recording (4) Include Exclude
Book / eBook (5,325) Include Exclude
Book Chapter (342) Include Exclude
Book Review (268) Include Exclude
Conference Proceeding (72) Include Exclude
Dissertation/Thesis (1,336) Include Exclude
Electronic Resource (2) Include Exclude
Government Document (208) Include Exclude
Journal / eJournal (1) Include Exclude
Journal Article (3,777) Include Exclude
Magazine Article (414) Include Exclude
Manuscript (2) Include Exclude
Newsletter (184) Include Exclude
Newspaper Article (4,416) Include Exclude
Paper (14) Include Exclude
Patent (7) Include Exclude
Publication (8) Include Exclude
Reference (181) Include Exclude
Report (58) Include Exclude
Research Guide (19) Include Exclude
Standard (1) Include Exclude
Streaming Video (18) Include Exclude
Technical Report (2) Include Exclude
Trade Publication Article (90) Include Exclude
Transcript (91) Include Exclude
Web Resource (23) Include Exclude
Peer Reviewed Journal Articles
2,750 results
============================
I just completed, yesterday, for a new research guide in progress, a
rather extensive list of databases that have content about neuropsychology
or employ a phrase starting with neuroscience followed by a psychological
concept such as psychology or the phrase mental health. The old way of
doing this was to look for databases that probably had content on a topic
or to use the standard lists created by others.
This complete post may be read at this web address
http://tinyurl.com/h5u8qlc
Here is a sampling of this content:
ABI/INFORM Complete
This database finds 3,553 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
Proquest Libguides ABI/INFORM
*
Academic OneFile
This database finds 92,123 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
Content Types
Academic Journals(92,123)
Magazines(3,934)
Books(103)
News(49,878)
Images(2)
*
Academic Search Complete
This database finds 144,203 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
Source Types
All Results
Academic Journals (141,049)
Book Reviews (1,400)
Magazines (1,382)
Newspapers (185)
Trade Publications (50)
*
Agricola [via EbscoHost]
This database finds 260 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
*
America: History & Life with Full Text
This database finds 91 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
*
Anthropology Plus [via EbscoHost]
This database finds 86 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
*
ArchiveGrid
Contains archival collections held by libraries, museums, historical
societies.
This database finds 210 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
*
Art & Architecture Source (formerly Art Source)
This database finds 289 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
*
================================================
On various academic discussion groups, I have seen professors and "authors
to be" ask members of a list for publication citations on a topic they
plan to research and publish about. How thorough and representative would
the literature review be resulting from such a method of finding sources?
I debated whether to check some of the databases in the neuropsychology
list and found sources for the Neuropsychology search where I was sure
there would be none. Also neuropsychology found in an odd place could be
a source of someones paper, using the citations found in that odd source.
Consider this example
Water Resources Abstracts
This database finds 27 sources for a search of neuropsychology OR
neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
This is one I was not going to check
The general theme in these 27 results has to do with brain damage
resulting from poisoned water. I have a research guide about Flint
Michigan in this regard, but what content is added to someones research
on poisoned water with these 27 sources? Letting the researcher know to
look there is a very important part of information sharing. It also can
get the database higher user counts adding to the justification for
keeping the database at the subscribing institution.
So what is the point of all of this? I go all the way back to the age of
card catalogs and print indexes to subject fields. It was murder trying to
find sources on a complex topic in that era.
Now in moments, one can find oceans of sources on many topics in seconds,
once a, pardon me for this one, reliable Boolean search strategy is
devised, on many topics such as "reliable research" OR on neuropsychology
OR neuropsychological OR (neuroscience AND (psychology OR psychological OR
"mental health" OR "mental illness" OR "mentally ill"))
I have many examples of search strategies with results with this link
"google domain limited web search" AND listserv
http://tinyurl.com/heq8ego
By the way, this link is a breakthrough for me as I just found a way to
show lots of search examples without Google providing links to mostly my
research guides which makes finding the examples a treasure hunt.
The point of this excursion is that we are no longer in the age of the
card catalog and print index, one cannot find either in a major library as
a core source meriting major use. I even advise against using online
catalogs as an authority for what a library holds on a specific topic as
Google Books, Summon, Worldcat and other discovery services such as Summon
do far far better. The online catalog is based on the print card catalog.
How much can one learn about the content of a book from an augmented three
by five card?
We are also no longer in an age wherein a scholars authority based on
personal experience is a valid or useful way of conducting reliable
research. Assertions based on this type of authority may be defeated
quickly by database searches and learning how to use these tools
effectively is a hobby researchers are highly advised to take up.
DATABASE SEARCHING: Search Technique Resources and Finding Tools
http://guides.temple.edu/databases
I have seen impossible topics melt into a piece of cake using these tools,
but there is a learning curve to use them effectively and time spent
learning their methods, which differ from system to system will help pile
larger portions of reliable research and evidence based content into the
underlying literature reviews of research projects and publications.
.
.
Sincerely,
David Dillard
Temple University
(215) 204 - 4584
[log in to unmask]
http://workface.com/e/daviddillard
Net-Gold
https://groups.io/g/Net-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/net-gold
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/net-gold.html
https://groups.io/org/groupsio/Net-Gold/archives
http://net-gold.3172864.n2.nabble.com/
Temple University and Google Sites Research Guides
AND Discussion Group Directory
http://tinyurl.com/ngda2hk
OR
https://sites.google.com/site/researchguidesonsites/
FAKE NEWS
https://sites.google.com/site/fakenewsresearchguide/
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING
http://guides.temple.edu/research-papers
EMPLOYMENT
http://guides.temple.edu/employment-guide
INTERNSHIPS
http://guides.temple.edu/employment-internships
HOSPITALITY
http://guides.temple.edu/hospitality-guide
DISABILITIES AND EMPLOYMENT
http://guides.temple.edu/c.php?g=134557
INDOOR GARDENING
https://groups.io/g/indoor-gardening
Educator-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Educator-Gold/
K12ADMINLIFE
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/K12AdminLIFE/
PUBLIC HEALTH RESOURCES INCLUDING EBOLA
http://guides.temple.edu/public-health-guide
STATISTICS SOURCES RESEARCH GUIDE
http://guides.temple.edu/statistics-sources
Social Work and Social Issues Discussion Group
https://groups.io/g/social-work
Tourism Discussion Group
https://groups.io/g/Tourism
Digital Scholarship Discussion Group
https://groups.io/g/DigitalScholarship/threads
https://listserv.temple.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=DIGITAL-SCHOLARSHIP
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/digital-scholarship/info
https://digitalscholarshipandscholarlypublication.wordpress.com/
Copyright Research Guide
Copyright, Intellectual Property and Plagiarism Sources
http://guides.temple.edu/copyright-plagiarism
Fair Use
http://guides.temple.edu/fair-use
Blog
https://educatorgold.wordpress.com/
Articles by David Dillard
https://sites.google.com/site/daviddillardsarticles/
Information Literacy (Russell Conwell Guide)
http://tinyurl.com/78a4shn
Twitter: davidpdillard
Temple University Site Map
https://sites.google.com/site/templeunivsitemap/home
Bushell, R. & Sheldon, P. (eds),
Wellness and Tourism: Mind, Body, Spirit,
Place, New York: Cognizant Communication Books.
Wellness Tourism: Bibliographic and Webliographic Essay
David P. Dillard
http://tinyurl.com/o4pn4o9
Rail Transportation
https://groups.io/org/groupsio/RailTransportation
INDOOR GARDENING
Improve Your Chances for Indoor Gardening Success
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/IndoorGardeningUrban/
SPORT-MED
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/sport-med.html
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sports-med/
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/sport-med.html
HEALTH DIET FITNESS RECREATION SPORTS TOURISM
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/healthrecsport/info
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/health-recreation-sports-tourism.html
On Mon, 27 Feb 2017, Ahmed Abou-Setta wrote:
>
> Hi Jon,
>
>
>
> I’ve never heard of any research type being labelled as reliable. A more accurate description is based on ‘study
> quality’ and ‘risk of bias’. Any study design may have a range of either (low to high study quality and/or low to
> high risk of bias). Another description is the evidence strength or quality resulting for said study design (at least
> using the GRADE methodology). I won’t go into details about each of these as there are lot of available literature on
> each topic and when and where each is appropriate to evaluate.
>
>
>
> Sincerely,
>
>
>
> Ahmed
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> From: Evidence based health (EBH) [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jon Brassey
> Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2017 5:10 AM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Query about systematic reviews
>
>
>
> Hi All,
>
>
>
> I'm helping a student with a piece of work and he described systematic reviews as being reliable. I'm troubled by
> this on a number of fronts:
>
>
>
> * Is there any evidence that they are reliable?
> * If they are reliable, in relation to what? A reliable car might not break down very often, so that outcome is
> clear. But I'm not sure what it means in relation to SRs
> * If SRs aren't properly described as 'reliable' what are they best described as?
>
>
>
> An underpinning assumption of SRs appears to be that if you identify all the published trials that bestows upon the
> SR a special status. This appears to be faith-based, not evidence-based.
>
>
>
> Any help out there?
>
>
>
> Best wishes
>
>
>
> jon
>
>
>
> --
>
> Jon Brassey
>
> Director, Trip Database
>
> Honorary Fellow at CEBM, University of Oxford
>
> Creator, Rapid-Reviews.info
>
>
>
>
>
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