Changes in Research Ethics, Openness, and Transparency in Empirical Studies between CHI 2017 and CHI 2022

Détails

Ressource 1Télécharger: chi23b-sub7412-cam-i16_7.pdf (2688.60 [Ko])
Etat: Public
Version: Author's accepted manuscript
Licence: CC BY 4.0
ID Serval
serval:BIB_364ED171A347
Type
Actes de conférence (partie): contribution originale à la littérature scientifique, publiée à l'occasion de conférences scientifiques, dans un ouvrage de compte-rendu (proceedings), ou dans l'édition spéciale d'un journal reconnu (conference proceedings).
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Changes in Research Ethics, Openness, and Transparency in Empirical Studies between CHI 2017 and CHI 2022
Titre de la conférence
In Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI'23)
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Salehzadeh Niksirat Kavous, Goswami Lahari, S. B. Rao Pooja, Tyler James, Silacci Alessandro, Aliyu Sadiq, Aebli Annika, Wacharamanotham Chat, Cherubini Mauro
Editeur
ACM
Organisation
CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Adresse
Hamburg, Germany
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
23/04/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Langue
anglais
Résumé
In recent years, various initiatives from within and outside the HCI field have encouraged researchers to improve research ethics, openness, and transparency in their empirical research. We quantify how the CHI literature might have changed in these three aspects by analyzing samples of 118 CHI 2017 and 127 CHI 2022 papers---randomly drawn and stratified across conference sessions. We operationalized research ethics, openness, and transparency into 45 criteria and manually annotated the sampled papers. The results show that the CHI 2022 sample was better in 18 criteria, but in the rest of the criteria, it has no improvement. The most noticeable improvements were related to research transparency (10 out of 17 criteria). We also explored the possibility of assisting the verification process by developing a proof-of-concept screening system. We tested this tool with eight criteria. Six of them achieved high accuracy and F1 score. We discuss the implications for future research practices and education.
This paper and all supplementary materials are freely available at https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/n25d6.
Mots-clé
replicability, reproducibility, transparency, ethics, open science, data availability, CHI
Données de la recherche
Open Access
Oui
APC
700 USD
Création de la notice
03/03/2023 16:03
Dernière modification de la notice
04/03/2023 8:09
Données d'usage