Difference between revisions of "Pre-Registration"

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* Andrew Foster, Dean Karlan, and Ted Miguel,  [https://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/registered-reports-piloting-pre-results-review-process-journal-development-economics Registered Reports: Piloting a Pre-Results Review Process at the Journal of Development Economics (JDE)]  
* Andrew Foster, Dean Karlan, and Ted Miguel,  [https://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/registered-reports-piloting-pre-results-review-process-journal-development-economics Registered Reports: Piloting a Pre-Results Review Process at the Journal of Development Economics (JDE)]  
* J-PAL, [https://www.povertyactionlab.org/blog/9-5-18/pre-results-review-journal-development-economics-taking-transparency-discipline-next Early insights on the Journal of Development Economics (JDE)’s pre-results review by Andrew Foster, Dean Karlan, and Ted Miguel]   
* J-PAL, [https://www.povertyactionlab.org/blog/9-5-18/pre-results-review-journal-development-economics-taking-transparency-discipline-next Early insights on the Journal of Development Economics (JDE)’s pre-results review by Andrew Foster, Dean Karlan, and Ted Miguel]   
*Ted Miguel, [http://emiguel.econ.berkeley.edu/assets/miguel_talks/40/Miguel-METRICS-lecture_2016-05-15.pdf Promoting transparency in Economics: Prospects for pre-specifying research hypotheses]  
*Ted Miguel (University of California, Berkeley), [http://emiguel.econ.berkeley.edu/assets/miguel_talks/40/Miguel-METRICS-lecture_2016-05-15.pdf Promoting transparency in Economics: Prospects for pre-specifying research hypotheses]  
*The World Bank’s David McKenzie [http://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/trying-out-new-trial-registries discusses] trial registries and differentiates between the 3ie Registry and the AEA RCT Registry.
* David McKenzie (World Bank) [http://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations/trying-out-new-trial-registries discusses Trying out the new Trial Registries]  
[[Category: Research Ethics]]
[[Category: Research Ethics]]

Revision as of 17:57, 7 October 2020

A pre-registration is a time-stamped research plan that researchers can create and upload before conducting a study. The objective of pre-registration is to provide researchers with an overview of ongoing studies in their field and to build research transparency by reducing selective reporting. While pre-registration is commonplace for clinical health trials, its use in development economics is more recent.

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Where can I register?

The American Economic Association (AEA) hosts a trial registry specifically for randomized controlled trials; the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie) provides a registry for experimental and quasi-experimental research in developing countries; and Open Science Framework offers a platform for registration and houses registries here.

What information should be included?

The information required for pre-registration typically includes the country and title, a brief description of the project, the timeline, outcomes to measure, sample size, study design, and ethical approval details. Some of the details provided can be uploaded and time stamped but hidden from public view prior to study completion. A pre-analysis plan, which provides a detailed description of how the analysis will be conducted, can also be uploaded, though this is typically not mandatory for pre-registration.

When should I register?

While clinical trials in health are expected to be registered before patient enrolment, there is currently no formal requirement for development economics trials to be registered by a particular stage of the research. In cases where intervention delivery is uncertain, development economics researchers may wait to register their trials until after baseline and interventions completed, but before any follow-up data collection or analysis takes place.

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This article is part of the topic Research Ethics

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