Research & Toxicology Department, Humane Society International, Lisbon, Portugal.
Casa de Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS Biol. 2021 Jun 15;19(6):e3001260. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001260. eCollection 2021 Jun.
There is increasing scrutiny around how science is communicated to the public. For instance, a Twitter account @justsaysinmice (with 70.4K followers in January 2021) was created to call attention to news headlines that omit that mice, not humans, are the ones for whom the study findings apply. This is the case of many headlines reporting on Alzheimer disease (AD) research. AD is characterized by a degeneration of the human brain, loss of cognition, and behavioral changes, for which no treatment is available. Around 200 rodent models have been developed to study AD, even though AD is an exclusively human condition that does not occur naturally in other species and appears impervious to reproduction in artificial animal models, an information not always disclosed. It is not known what prompts writers of news stories to either omit or acknowledge, in the story's headlines, that the study was done in mice and not in humans. Here, we raised the hypothesis that how science is reported by scientists plays a role on the news reporting. To test this hypothesis, we investigated whether an association exists between articles' titles and news' headlines regarding the omission, or not, of mice. To this end, we analyzed a sample of 623 open-access scientific papers indexed in PubMed in 2018 and 2019 that used mice either as models or as the biological source for experimental studies in AD research. We found a significant association (p < 0.01) between articles' titles and news stories' headlines, revealing that when authors omit the species in the paper's title, writers of news stories tend to follow suit. We also found that papers not mentioning mice in their titles are more newsworthy and significantly more tweeted than papers that do. Our study shows that science reporting may affect media reporting and asks for changes in the way we report about findings obtained with animal models used to study human diseases.
人们越来越关注科学是如何向公众传播的。例如,创建了一个名为@justsaysinmice(截至 2021 年 1 月拥有 70.4 万粉丝)的 Twitter 账户,以提醒人们注意新闻标题,这些标题省略了研究结果适用于哪些动物的信息,即老鼠而非人类。许多报道阿尔茨海默病(AD)研究的标题都属于这种情况。AD 的特征是人类大脑退化、认知丧失和行为改变,目前尚无治疗方法。已经开发了大约 200 种啮齿动物模型来研究 AD,尽管 AD 是一种仅发生在人类身上的疾病,在其他物种中不会自然发生,并且在人工动物模型中也不易再现,而这些信息并不总是被披露。不知道促使新闻报道者在标题中省略或承认研究是在老鼠身上进行而不是在人类身上进行的原因是什么。在这里,我们提出了一个假设,即科学家如何报道科学会对新闻报道产生影响。为了验证这一假设,我们调查了文章标题与新闻标题之间是否存在关联,即是否省略了老鼠。为此,我们分析了 2018 年和 2019 年在 PubMed 中索引的 623 篇开放获取的科学论文,这些论文使用老鼠作为 AD 研究中的模型或作为实验研究的生物来源。我们发现文章标题和新闻报道标题之间存在显著关联(p < 0.01),这表明当作者在论文标题中省略物种时,新闻报道的作者往往也会效仿。我们还发现,标题中没有提到老鼠的论文比提到老鼠的论文更有新闻价值,也更受推特点赞。我们的研究表明,科学报道可能会影响媒体报道,并要求我们改变报告使用动物模型研究人类疾病所获得的研究结果的方式。