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Christmas 2015: The Publication Game: Use of positive and negative words in scientific PubMed abstracts between 1974 and 2014: retrospective analysis

机译:2015年圣诞节:发布游戏:1974年至2014年间在PubMed科学摘要中使用正负词:回顾性分析

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摘要

>Objective To investigate whether language used in science abstracts can skew towards the use of strikingly positive and negative words over time.>Design Retrospective analysis of all scientific abstracts in PubMed between 1974 and 2014.>Methods The yearly frequencies of positive, negative, and neutral words (25 preselected words in each category), plus 100 randomly selected words were normalised for the total number of abstracts. Subanalyses included pattern quantification of individual words, specificity for selected high impact journals, and comparison between author affiliations within or outside countries with English as the official majority language. Frequency patterns were compared with 4% of all books ever printed and digitised by use of Google Books Ngram Viewer. >Main outcome measures Frequencies of positive and negative words in abstracts compared with frequencies of words with a neutral and random connotation, expressed as relative change since 1980.>Results The absolute frequency of positive words increased from 2.0% (1974-80) to 17.5% (2014), a relative increase of 880% over four decades. All 25 individual positive words contributed to the increase, particularly the words “robust,” “novel,” “innovative,” and “unprecedented,” which increased in relative frequency up to 15 000%. Comparable but less pronounced results were obtained when restricting the analysis to selected journals with high impact factors. Authors affiliated to an institute in a non-English speaking country used significantly more positive words. Negative word frequencies increased from 1.3% (1974-80) to 3.2% (2014), a relative increase of 257%. Over the same time period, no apparent increase was found in neutral or random word use, or in the frequency of positive word use in published books.>Conclusions Our lexicographic analysis indicates that scientific abstracts are currently written with more positive and negative words, and provides an insight into the evolution of scientific writing. Apparently scientists look on the bright side of research results. But whether this perception fits reality should be questioned.
机译:>目的:调查科学摘要中使用的语言是否会随着时间的推移倾向于使用引人注目的肯定和否定词。>设计:对1974年至2014年间PubMed中所有科学摘要的回顾性分析。>方法将正,负和中性词的年频率(每个类别中25个预选词)加上100个随机选择的词的摘要数进行归一化。子分析包括单个单词的模式量化,所选高影响力期刊的特异性以及以英语为官方主要语言的国家内部或外部的作者单位之间的比较。使用Google图书Ngram Viewer将频率模式与所有印刷和数字化的图书中的4%进行了比较。 >主要结果度量摘要中正词和负词的频率与具有中性和随机含义的词的频率相比,表示自1980年以来的相对变化。>结果字数从2.0%(1974-80)增加到17.5%(2014),在过去的40年中相对增加了880%。所有25个肯定的词都对增加有所贡献,特别是“健壮”,“新颖”,“创新”和“空前”这两个词的相对频率增加了15 000%。将分析限制在具有较高影响因子的选定期刊上时,可获得可比但不太明显的结果。隶属于非英语国家机构的作者使用的肯定词要多得多。负词频率从1.3%(1974-80)增加到3.2%(2014),相对增加了257%。在同一时间段内,中性或随机单词的使用或已出版书籍中肯定单词的使用频率均未发现明显增加。>结论我们的词典分析表明,目前科学摘要的撰写更多正面和负面的话语,并为科学写作的发展提供了见识。显然,科学家看待研究结果的光明面。但是,这种看法是否符合现实应该受到质疑。

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