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Truth decay, disinformation, replication crisis | Homeland Security Newswire
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Papers that are less likely to be true are often the most cited in academic research
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A New Replication Crisis: Research that is Less Likely to be True is Cited More
Papers that cannot be replicated are cited 153 times more because their findings are interesting, according to a new UC San Diego study
Credit: Dilok Klaisataporn/iStock. Findings from studies that cannot be verified when the experiments are repeated are cited 153 times more because the research is interesting, according to a new UC San Diego paper.
Papers in leading psychology, economic and science journals that fail to replicate and therefore are less likely to be true are often the most cited papers in academic research, according to a new study by the University of California San Diego’s Rady School of Management.
Research findings that are probably wrong cited far more than robust ones, study finds
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Mind the gap Is fintech closing the gender gap in access to finance?
Equitable access to financial services: A policy prerogative
Fair and equitable access to financial services is a prerequisite for economic security and prosperity. It can improve individuals’ employment outcomes, wealth accumulation, and propensity to start a business. Yet, women all over the world remain unbanked or underbanked (Demirgüc-Kunt et al. 2017). Hopes are high that new financial technology – or “fintech” – can enhance financial inclusion and finally close the gender gap in access to financial services.
But does fintech help to close the gender gap? To find out, we looked at 27,000 adults in 28 major economies (Chen et al. 2021), who shared their use of and attitudes toward fintech products and services provided by fintech entrants and traditional financial institutions. The sample is representative along the age and gender distributions and contains detailed background information on the