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Competências Básicas de Investigação Científica e de Publicação

Competências Básicas de Investigação Científica e de Publicação. Lecture 1: Hypotheses and Search Phonoaudiology November 2013. Publishing is an essential research skill. determining likelihood of acceptance. navigating a submission system in a second language.

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Competências Básicas de Investigação Científica e de Publicação

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  1. CompetênciasBásicas de InvestigaçãoCientífica e de Publicação Lecture 1: Hypotheses and Search Phonoaudiology November 2013 Ganesha Associates

  2. Publishing is an essential research skill determining likelihood of acceptance navigating a submission system in a second language assessing relevance to research topic comparing journals Peer Review Journal Selection Publication Success Writing Submission Preparation decision to re-submit, or try a different journal writing an outline understanding comments writing in English formatting to guidelines citation management long decision timelines Publication ethics

  3. www.ganesha-associates.com Ganesha Associates

  4. Me… • BSc Physics 1971, PhD Neuroscience 1976, post doc 1975-1979 • Visiting Professor, UFPe 1978-79 • Editor, Publisher, Director at Elsevier Science 1979 – 2005 • Pubmed systems expert, NCBI, NIH 2006-2007 • STM business analyst, Outsell Inc, 2009-2011 • Visiting Professor UFPe, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2012, 2013 Ganesha Associates

  5. The scientific process involves making models of how things work • These evolving models are described in the scientific literature • Sometimes the models are wrong, often they are incomplete • Scientific progress is driven by the communication and publication of the results of new research, and the reinterpretation of older work • The tool which makes all of this possible is the hypothesis Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

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  9. Neural correlates of mapping from phonology to orthography in children performing an auditory spelling task Ganesha Associates

  10. Experimental and observational types of research

  11. Experimental vs. Observational studies No modification of experimental variables Useful to discover trends and associations Cannot directly be used to infer causality Compare responses different treatments Designed to avoid misleading results e.g. randomisation Can be used to infer cause and effect Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  12. Mainlearning points • Studentprojectsfallintothreecategories • No hypothesis, i.e. observational • Weakhypothesis • Strong hypothesis • The workwillbepublished in a • Nationaljournal • Lowimpactfactorjournal • High impactfactorjournal • Startingwithstronghypothesis improves your chances ofgettingpublished in a goodjournal Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

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  14. What is a strong hypothesis ? • A strong hypothesis is based on a series of premises – things that are already known with some certainty • Each premise must be supported by references back to the (international) primary literature • So a strong hypothesis will be backed by references to recent papers in high quality journals Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

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  16. Coin-tossing - an example • IwonderhowmanyheadsortailsIwillgetifItossthiscoin 100 times • No model • The frequencydistributionofheadsandtailswillbeapproximatedby a binomial distributionwithn=100 andp=0.5 • Simplemodel, basedonsymmetry • A detailedanalysisofthe dynamics revealsthattheprobabilityof a headis 0.51 • Complexmodel, basedonasymmetry, aerodynamics, etc Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  17. Coin-tossing – impact on CV 1. None, or possibly negative 2. R. A. Fisher and others did perform this experiment in the early days of biological statistics, before the advent of computers, as a proof that the binomial distribution tended towards a normal one at high levels of n. Interestingly they all found that the probability of a head p was usually slightly higher than 0.5, but this difference was ignored. 3. PersiDiacusis, Susan Holmes and Richard Montgomery (Stanford, 2004) publish a paper on the ‘Dynamical bias in the coin toss’ proving that the lack of total symmetry in a coin means that the probability of a head will always be slightly greater than 0.5. Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  18. Coin tossing - relevance • Children with unilateral hearing loss (UHL) have been found to have lower language scores, and increased rate of speech therapy, grade failures, or needing Individualized Education Plans . The objective of this study was to determine whether language skills and educational performance improved or worsened over time in a cohort of children with UHL. • To determine factors associated with physical therapy or occupational therapy evaluation and speech or swallow therapy evaluation in hospitalized children with traumatic brain injury; to describe when during the hospital stay the initial therapy evaluations typically occur; and to quantify any between-hospital variation in therapy evaluation. • Articulation disorders in young children are due to defects occurring at a certain stage in sensory and motor development. Some children with functional articulation disorders may also have sensory integration dysfunction (SID). We hypothesized that speech therapy would be less efficacious in children with SID than in those without SID • The present study provides data that support the hypothesis that children who stutter and typically developing children differ on both composite temperament factors and temperament scales. The findings were interpreted within existing frameworks of temperament development, as well as with regard to previous studies of temperament in CWS. Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  19. Case study: Hummingbird territorial behaviour Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  20. Hummingbird territorial behaviour Most hummingbird species demonstrate strong territorial behavior If a bluffing charge attack does not work, the resident may engage the trespasser in a brief but intense physical battle So why do hummingbirds defend territories ? H0: Hummingbirds are randomly distributed in space and time. Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  21. Hummingbird territorial behaviour H1 If territory = F(energy), then behavior not species-dependent If territory = F(mating), then behaviorshould be species and sex dependent If… If… Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  22. Territorial behaviour in 1971 • Time, Energy, and Territoriality of the Anna Hummingbird (Calypteanna) Science 173 (1971) 818-821. • When territory quality decreases defenders may switch to less expensive forms of defense because the energy savings outweigh the loss of resources • Augmented territorial defense during the breeding season is made possible by increased feeding efficiency due to the availability at this time of very nectar-rich flowers. • Individuals with large territories are more successful reproductively. Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  23. Hummingbird territoriality since • Hovering performance of hummingbirds in hyperoxic gas mixtures. J Exp Biol. 2001 Jun;204(Pt 11):2021-7. • Adipose energy stores, physical work, and the metabolic syndrome: lessons from hummingbirds. Nutr J. 2005 Dec 13;4:36. • Neural specialization for hovering in hummingbirds: hypertrophy of the pretectal nucleus Lentiformismesencephali. J Comp Neurol. 2007 Jan 10;500(2):211-21. • Three-dimensional kinematics of hummingbird flight. J Exp Biol. 2007 Jul;210(Pt 13):2368-82. Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  24. Hypothesis lecture learning points • Good hypotheses build directly onto previous work • So they need to become technically more sophisticated over time moving from the general to the particular • A given problem can be associated with a number of very different hypotheses – your experiments should include tests to exclude these alternative explanations Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  25. Hypothesis lecture learning points • Hypotheses can be weak (observational) or strong (mechanism-based) • For example, a hypothesis which predicts that a tossed coin will end up ‘heads’ 50% of the time is much weaker than one that can predict the exact sequence of ‘heads’ and ‘tails’ • So hypothesis ‘quality’ is important Ganesha Associates CC BY 3.0

  26. Search Ganesha Associates

  27. Some sources of scientific content • Google • PubMed/Medline (NLM) • Scopus (Elsevier) • Web of Science (Thomson Reuters) • Google Scholar • PubMed Central, PubMed Central Europe • SciELO, Biblioteca Virtual emSaude • Science Direct, Ovid, SpringerLink, Wiley Online Library, BiomedCentral, Public Library of Science, SWETSwise… • CAPES Portal de Periódicos Ganesha Associates

  28. Each source is different • Free • Google, Google Scholar, Pubmed Central • Subscription • Scopus, ScienceDirect • Abstracts and citations only • PubMed, Web of Science • Full text, single publisher • SpringerLink • Full text, many publishers • Pubmed Central, SwetsWise Online Content

  29. Classify sources of content Abstract only Full text Free access Subscription

  30. You can get access if… • The journal is subscribed to by CAPES • You have a personal subscription • The journal is of the ‘Open Access’ type • Note: some journals only make their content ‘Open Access’ after 6 or longer months. Some journals contain a mixture of OA and non-OA articles. See http://europepmc.org/journalList for more info. • Journals in the ‘red’ categories are available anywhere. • Most journals subscribed to by CAPES will be available from more than one source. • CAPES journals are only available from computers within the University network unless you have remote access privileges. Ganesha Associates

  31. So which sources should I use ? • No single source contains all of the articles relevant to your research • Google has the broadest coverage, but not all of the documents you find will be peer-reviewed articles • Scopus, WoS and PubMed give you the best balance between quality and quantity, and, in theory, should link to all the content subscribed to by CAPES, plus OA content. Ganesha Associates

  32. Components of a bibliographic database • Content such as abstracts and full-text articles [or a pointer to where these may be found] • Metadata [data about data] • Index • Search engine • Ranking/relevance algorithm • Plus many additional features Ganesha Associates

  33. Content (Basic PDF) Ganesha Associates

  34. Content (HTML) Ganesha Associates

  35. The basis of search: Indexing • The purpose of an index is to optimize speed and performance in finding relevant documents for a search query. • Without an index, the search engine would have to scan every document in the corpus, which would require considerable time and computing power. • Metadata helps the indexing algorithm to select different classes of terminology from which to make an index, so a search can be carried out on just the authors names, for example Ganesha Associates

  36. Search: how the result list is ranked • Date of publication • Relevance • Frequency with which search terms occur in the document • Proximity of search terms • Google’s PageRank algorithm uses "link popularity”- a document is ranked higher if there are more links to it Ganesha Associates

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  38. The question behind the query • Search engines think in terms of words, but users think in terms of sentences! • How do you spell Bousfield? • What do we know about BRCA1? • Given these symptoms, what is the most likely diagnosis? • What are the side effects of aspirin? • Has this chemical structure been synthesized before? • “Cancer causes X” vs. “Y causes cancer”

  39. What real queries look like - Google • pharmacogenomics and disorders • bacteria growth casein media effect • waal pseudomonas • TRPM2 PCR mouse • Chitinases in carnivorous plants • glycerophosphoinositol 4-phosphate • Dai N, Gubler C, Hengstler P, Meyenberger C, Bauerfeind P. Improved capsule endoscopy after bowel preparation. GastrointestEndosc 2005;61(1) 28-31. Ganesha Associates

  40. Query changes people actually make • Query series 1 • latrunculin • latrunculin fm3a cell arrest • latrunculin fm3a arrest • latrunculin fm3a • latrunculin FM3A • Query series 2 • cytokininsignalling in arabidopsis • "cytokininsignalling in arabidopsis" • cytokinin delta • spindly arabidopsis • Results • Remember to look beyond the first page. Compare the results of Query 1 in PubMed and Google (add the term PubMed) Ganesha Associates

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  42. Improving search accuracy • Wild card characters • "a * saved is a * earned" • Operators • jaguar speed -car • Pandas -site:wikipedia.org • “ribosome” • Synonyms • MeSH terms • Boolean terms • AND, OR, NOT • Faceted search • GO terms

  43. Anatomy of a query - Pubmed • invasive fungal infections in young children • invasive[All Fields] AND ("mycoses"[MeSH Terms] OR "mycoses"[All Fields] OR ("fungal"[All Fields] AND "infections"[All Fields]) OR "fungal infections"[All Fields])AND("Young Child"[Journal] OR ("young"[All Fields] AND "children"[All Fields]) OR "young children"[All Fields]) Ganesha Associates

  44. So… • Using the same search terms will produce different results in different databases because: • Content different • Preparation of search terms will be different, e.g. only Pubmed uses MeSH terms • Indexing process, implementation of stemming, removal of stop words will be different • Ranking algorithms will be different

  45. Quick tour

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