2021
DOI: 10.1002/leap.1411
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Over‐promotion and caution in abstracts of preprints during the COVID‐19 crisis

Abstract: The abstract is known to be a promotional genre where researchers tend to exaggerate the benefit of their research and use a promotional discourse to catch the reader's attention. The COVID‐19 pandemic has prompted intensive research and has changed traditional publishing with the massive adoption of preprints by researchers. Our aim is to investigate whether the crisis and the ensuing scientific and economic competition have changed the lexical content of abstracts. We propose a comparative study of abstracts… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(104 reference statements)
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“…Cao et al ( 2020 ) also find an increasingly positive trend in terms of linguistic positivity based on the examination of how the frequencies of positive and negative words change over time in both abstracts and full texts in journals from PubMed. Second, the latest studies resort to larger dictionaries and lexicons to tackle the limitation of the small list of positive and negative words (Vinkers et al, 2015 ), including studies by Holtz et al ( 2017 ), Bordignon et al ( 2021 ), and Wen and Lei ( 2021 ). In these studies, researchers adopt self-created dictionaries (Holtz et al, 2017 ), expanded list of positive/negative words (Bordignon et al, 2021 ), or sentiment analysis with large lexicons in R (Wen & Lei, 2021 ) to triangulate the results based on Vinkers et al’s ( 2015 ) small list of positive and negative words.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Cao et al ( 2020 ) also find an increasingly positive trend in terms of linguistic positivity based on the examination of how the frequencies of positive and negative words change over time in both abstracts and full texts in journals from PubMed. Second, the latest studies resort to larger dictionaries and lexicons to tackle the limitation of the small list of positive and negative words (Vinkers et al, 2015 ), including studies by Holtz et al ( 2017 ), Bordignon et al ( 2021 ), and Wen and Lei ( 2021 ). In these studies, researchers adopt self-created dictionaries (Holtz et al, 2017 ), expanded list of positive/negative words (Bordignon et al, 2021 ), or sentiment analysis with large lexicons in R (Wen & Lei, 2021 ) to triangulate the results based on Vinkers et al’s ( 2015 ) small list of positive and negative words.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, the latest studies resort to larger dictionaries and lexicons to tackle the limitation of the small list of positive and negative words (Vinkers et al, 2015 ), including studies by Holtz et al ( 2017 ), Bordignon et al ( 2021 ), and Wen and Lei ( 2021 ). In these studies, researchers adopt self-created dictionaries (Holtz et al, 2017 ), expanded list of positive/negative words (Bordignon et al, 2021 ), or sentiment analysis with large lexicons in R (Wen & Lei, 2021 ) to triangulate the results based on Vinkers et al’s ( 2015 ) small list of positive and negative words. Third, regarding the limitation of findings generalised from one discipline, Bordignon et al ( 2021 ) compare abstracts across disciplines between a pre-pandemic corpus and a corpus of preprints issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and discover an increase of positive words and a slight decrease of negative words.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Others may intentionally use preprints to release replications, and null results that are difficult to publish (27), or works in progress which may be less well-written and inadequate at sharing data/code (17)(18)(19)(20). Many preprints actually report their results in a balanced way so as not to 'oversell' their findings (31). Preprints on clinical trials for example were shown to report results that may be just as credible as those of publications (32).…”
Section: Constructing and Validating Precheck: A Checklist To Evaluat...mentioning
confidence: 99%