
Contents
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A Crisis in Current Research A Crisis in Current Research
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The Potential for Amateur Science/Citizen Science/User-Led Research The Potential for Amateur Science/Citizen Science/User-Led Research
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Worries: Can Amateur Research Be Trusted? Worries: Can Amateur Research Be Trusted?
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What’s This Got to Do with Rating Scales and Classification? What’s This Got to Do with Rating Scales and Classification?
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What Sorts of Classifications and Rating Scales Might User-Led Research in Mental Health Need? What Sorts of Classifications and Rating Scales Might User-Led Research in Mental Health Need?
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Notes Notes
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References References
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9 Classification, Rating Scales, and Promoting User-Led Research
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Published:February 2017
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Abstract
Psychiatric research currently faces multiple crises; one is that trust in reported research findings has been eroded. Concerns that much research serves the interests of industry rather than the interests of patients have become mainstream. Such worries are not unique to psychiatry, but extend to many areas of science. One way in which such concerns can be ameliorated is via the development of more amateur/ citizen/ user-led research. I argue that promoting research conducted outside of traditional academic settings promises a range of benefits – both to the non-traditional researchers themselves and to others who want truths to be discovered. Having argued that it would be a good idea to have more user-produced research, I discuss how research by users might be facilitated or hindered by changes to the informational infrastructure of science. In particular, I discuss how different styles of classification, and rating scale, can facilitate the work of some research communities and set-back the work of others.
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