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Scientific Reporting Standards and Guidelines

Source: peer-review

Scientific Reporting Standards and Guidelines

This document catalogs major reporting standards and guidelines across scientific disciplines. When reviewing manuscripts, verify that authors have followed the appropriate guidelines for their study type and discipline.

Clinical Trials and Medical Research

CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials)

Purpose: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) Key Requirements:

Reference: http://www.consort-statement.org/

STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology)

Purpose: Observational studies (cohort, case-control, cross-sectional) Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.strobe-statement.org/

PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses)

Purpose: Systematic reviews and meta-analyses Key Requirements:

Reference: http://www.prisma-statement.org/

SPIRIT (Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials)

Purpose: Clinical trial protocols Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.spirit-statement.org/

CARE (CAse REport guidelines)

Purpose: Case reports Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.care-statement.org/

Animal Research

ARRIVE (Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments)

Purpose: Studies involving animal research Key Requirements:

Reference: https://arriveguidelines.org/

Genomics and Molecular Biology

MIAME (Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment)

Purpose: Microarray experiments Key Requirements:

Reference: http://fged.org/projects/miame/

MINSEQE (Minimum Information about a high-throughput Nucleotide Sequencing Experiment)

Purpose: High-throughput sequencing (RNA-seq, ChIP-seq, etc.) Key Requirements:

MIGS/MIMS (Minimum Information about a Genome/Metagenome Sequence)

Purpose: Genome and metagenome sequencing Key Requirements:

Reference: https://gensc.org/

Structural Biology

PDB (Protein Data Bank) Deposition Requirements

Purpose: Macromolecular structure determination Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.wwpdb.org/

Proteomics and Mass Spectrometry

MIAPE (Minimum Information About a Proteomics Experiment)

Purpose: Proteomics experiments Key Requirements:

Reference: http://www.psidev.info/

Neuroscience

COBIDAS (Committee on Best Practices in Data Analysis and Sharing)

Purpose: MRI and fMRI studies Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.humanbrainmapping.org/cobidas

Flow Cytometry

MIFlowCyt (Minimum Information about a Flow Cytometry Experiment)

Purpose: Flow cytometry experiments Key Requirements:

Reference: http://flowcyt.org/

Ecology and Environmental Science

MIAPPE (Minimum Information About a Plant Phenotyping Experiment)

Purpose: Plant phenotyping studies Key Requirements:

Reference: https://www.miappe.org/

Chemistry and Chemical Biology

MIRIBEL (Minimum Information Reporting in Bio-Nano Experimental Literature)

Purpose: Nanomaterial characterization Key Requirements:

Quality Assessment and Bias

CAMARADES (Collaborative Approach to Meta-Analysis and Review of Animal Data from Experimental Studies)

Purpose: Quality assessment for animal studies in systematic reviews Key Items:

SYRCLE's Risk of Bias Tool

Purpose: Assessing risk of bias in animal intervention studies Domains:

General Principles Across Guidelines

Common Requirements

  1. Transparency: All methods, materials, and analyses fully described
  2. Reproducibility: Sufficient detail for independent replication
  3. Data Availability: Raw data and analysis code shared or deposited
  4. Registration: Studies pre-registered where applicable
  5. Ethics: Appropriate approvals and consent documented
  6. Conflicts of Interest: Disclosed for all authors
  7. Statistical Rigor: Methods appropriate and fully described
  8. Completeness: All outcomes reported, including negative results

Red Flags for Non-Compliance

How to Use This Reference

When reviewing a manuscript:

  1. Identify the study type and discipline
  2. Find the relevant reporting guideline(s)
  3. Check if authors mention following the guideline
  4. Verify that key requirements are addressed
  5. Note any missing elements in your review
  6. Suggest the appropriate guideline if not mentioned

Many journals require authors to complete reporting checklists at submission. Reviewers should verify compliance even if a checklist was submitted.

Skills Using This Standard (1)