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Igor Chudov's avatar

Thank you for a great post. This tenacity and attention to detail is why I read all your posts. (and Brian's)

I totally agree on going beyond the abstract. I find a significant number of abstracts to be purposely misleading. This might be because of the antivax nature of my interests, as studies that objectively demonstrate anti-covid-vax results might state a pro-vax conclusion that allows them to be published.

I usually read the title, abstract, figures and usually the whole article. If the article mentions vaccinated vs unvaccinated control group my interest is piqued and I always look at all data tables.

There were a couple of articles that contained data that allowed some unintended (by authors) conclusions and such things are always newsworthy.

I also often struggle with graphs or figures, which use abbreviations that I cannot understand, or do not explain what they are actually displaying etc. I am glad that I am not alone. I thought I was.

I do suffer from attention deficit and am constantly distracted by people and that is terrible for attentive article reading, so I struggle in this department but try to at least make sure I understood what the article is saying. Sometimes I feel to be intentionally being confused.

This is where I am grateful to people who dig extra deeply into articles, like you do. It is very refreshing.

The M&M section is something that I usually ignore due to not having lab knowledge.

Thank you for an amazing post

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Pete Lincoln's avatar

Great post. I would add to this the importance of the supplementary indexes where sometimes key results are hidden w/o comment.

Also Conflict of Interest and Funding sections

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