Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

An analysis of the quality of experimental design and reliability of results in tribology research

Watson, Michael; Christoforou, Peter; Herrera, Paulo; Preece, Daniel; Carrell, Julia; Harmon, Matthew; Krier, Peter; Lewis, Stephen; Maiti, Raman; Skipper, William; Taylor, Ellis; Walsh, Jonathan; Zalzalah, Mohanad; Alhadeff, Lisa; Kempka, Reuben; Lanigan, Joseph; Lee, Zing Siang; White, Benjamin; Ishizaka, Kei; Lewis, Roger; Slatter, Tom; Dwyer-Joyce, Rob; Marshall, Matthew

Authors

Michael Watson

Peter Christoforou

Paulo Herrera

Julia Carrell

Matthew Harmon

Peter Krier

Stephen Lewis

Raman Maiti

William Skipper

Ellis Taylor

Jonathan Walsh

Mohanad Zalzalah

Lisa Alhadeff

Reuben Kempka

Joseph Lanigan

Zing Siang Lee

Benjamin White

Kei Ishizaka

Roger Lewis

Tom Slatter

Rob Dwyer-Joyce

Matthew Marshall



Abstract

In recent years several high profile projects have questioned the repeatability and validity of scientific research in the fields of psychology and medicine. In general, these studies have shown or estimated that less than 50% of published research findings are true or replicable even when no breaches of ethics are made. This high percentage stems from widespread poor study design; either through the use of underpowered studies or designs that allow the introduction of bias into the results. In this work, we have aimed to assess, for the first time, the prevalence of good study design in the field of tribology. A set of simple criteria for factors such as randomisation, blinding, use of control and repeated tests has been made. These criteria have been used in a mass review of the output of five highly regarded tribology journals for the year 2017. In total 379 papers were reviewed by 26 reviewers, 28% of the total output of the journals selected for 2017. Our results show that the prevalence of these simple aspects of study design is poor. Out of 290 experimental studies, 2.2% used any form of blinding, 3.2% used randomisation of either the tests or the test samples, while none randomised both. 30% repeated experiments 3 or more times and 86% of those who repeated tests used single batches of test materials. 4.4% completed statistical tests on their data. Due to the low prevalence of repeated tests and statistical analysis it is impossible to give a realistic indication of the percentage of the published works that are likely to be false positives, however these results compare poorly to other more well studied fields. Finally, recommendations for improved study design for researchers and group design for research group leaders are given.

Citation

Watson, M., Christoforou, P., Herrera, P., Preece, D., Carrell, J., Harmon, M., …Marshall, M. (2019). An analysis of the quality of experimental design and reliability of results in tribology research. Wear, 426-427, 1712-1718. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wear.2018.12.028

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 12, 2018
Online Publication Date Apr 10, 2019
Publication Date Apr 30, 2019
Deposit Date Oct 3, 2022
Journal Wear
Print ISSN 0043-1648
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 426-427
Pages 1712-1718
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wear.2018.12.028
Keywords Tribology; Replication; Experimental design
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4086942
Related Public URLs https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/140294/