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Animal Studies Relating To Neurological Disorders And Essay

¶ … animal studies relating to neurological disorders and how they are often ostensibly biased is the subject of the article covered for this brief report. The article was published earlier in 2013 and appeared in PLOS and on the internet (Tsilidis, 2013). The article did a study of a series of prior studies that used animal testing and research to look at neurological disorder. In total, a total of nearly 4,500 data sets were looked at. The diseases that were followed the most included Alzheimer disease, experimental autoimmune encephalitis, focal ischemia, intracerebral hemorrhage, Parkinson's disease, and spinal cord injuries in general. The study focused on the significance bias of these studies. To that end, it found that 919 out of the 4,445 results were expected vs. The 1,719 that were observed. This excess significance was found across all of the disorders mentioned above and...

This result is important, as noted in the next paragraph, because there is a common thread in a lot of studies whose results are then extended to human trials because the results hardly ever hold as being as good or beneficial in the human trials. However, the study queries itself and the listener by asking whether focusing on studies without excess significance and with an ample enough study size would yield better results in human studies as the quality of result would be better, in theory.
Even so, this particular study was up front in…

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Tsilidis, K. (2013). Evaluation of Excess Significance Bias in Animal Studies of Neurological Diseases. PLoS Biology, 11(7), 1-10.
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