OBJECTIVE: To quantify the use of question marks in titles of published studies. DESIGN AND SETTING: Literature review. PARTICIPANTS: All Pubmed publications between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2013 with an available abstract. Papers were classified as being clinical when the search terms clin*, med* or patient* were found anywhere in the paper's title, abstract or the journal's name. Other papers were considered controls. As a verification, clinical journals were compared to non-clinical journals in two different approaches. Also, 50 highest impact journals were explored for publisher group dependent differences. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Total number of question marks in titles. RESULTS: A total of 368,362 papers were classified as clinical and 596,889 as controls. Clinical papers had question marks in 3.9% (95% confidence interval 3.8-4.0%) of titles and other papers in 2.3% (confidence interval 2.3-2.3%; p <0.001). These findings could be verified for clinical journals compared to non-clinical journals. Different percentages between four publisher groups were found (p <0.01). CONCLUSION: We found more question marks in titles of clinical papers than in other papers. This could suggest that clinicians often have a question-driven approach to research and scientists in more fundamental research a hypothesis-driven approach. An alternative explanation is that clinicians like catchy titles. Publishing groups might have pro- and anti-question mark policies.
CITATION STYLE
Zijlmans, M., Otte, W. M., van’t Klooster, M. A., van Diessen, E., Leijten, F. S., & Sander, J. W. (2015). Do clinicians use more question marks? JRSM Open, 6(5), 205427041557902. https://doi.org/10.1177/2054270415579027
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