Same data, different analysts: variation in effect sizes due to analytical decisions in ecology and evolutionary biology.

IF 4.5 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY BMC Biology Pub Date : 2025-02-06 DOI:10.1186/s12915-024-02101-x
Elliot Gould, Hannah S Fraser, Timothy H Parker, Shinichi Nakagawa, Simon C Griffith, Peter A Vesk, Fiona Fidler, Daniel G Hamilton, Robin N Abbey-Lee, Jessica K Abbott, Luis A Aguirre, Carles Alcaraz, Irith Aloni, Drew Altschul, Kunal Arekar, Jeff W Atkins, Joe Atkinson, Christopher M Baker, Meghan Barrett, Kristian Bell, Suleiman Kehinde Bello, Iván Beltrán, Bernd J Berauer, Michael Grant Bertram, Peter D Billman, Charlie K Blake, Shannon Blake, Louis Bliard, Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati, Timothée Bonnet, Camille Nina Marion Bordes, Aneesh P H Bose, Thomas Botterill-James, Melissa Anna Boyd, Sarah A Boyle, Tom Bradfer-Lawrence, Jennifer Bradham, Jack A Brand, Martin I Brengdahl, Martin Bulla, Luc Bussière, Ettore Camerlenghi, Sara E Campbell, Leonardo L F Campos, Anthony Caravaggi, Pedro Cardoso, Charles J W Carroll, Therese A Catanach, Xuan Chen, Heung Ying Janet Chik, Emily Sarah Choy, Alec Philip Christie, Angela Chuang, Amanda J Chunco, Bethany L Clark, Andrea Contina, Garth A Covernton, Murray P Cox, Kimberly A Cressman, Marco Crotti, Connor Davidson Crouch, Pietro B D'Amelio, Alexandra Allison de Sousa, Timm Fabian Döbert, Ralph Dobler, Adam J Dobson, Tim S Doherty, Szymon Marian Drobniak, Alexandra Grace Duffy, Alison B Duncan, Robert P Dunn, Jamie Dunning, Trishna Dutta, Luke Eberhart-Hertel, Jared Alan Elmore, Mahmoud Medhat Elsherif, Holly M English, David C Ensminger, Ulrich Rainer Ernst, Stephen M Ferguson, Esteban Fernandez-Juricic, Thalita Ferreira-Arruda, John Fieberg, Elizabeth A Finch, Evan A Fiorenza, David N Fisher, Amélie Fontaine, Wolfgang Forstmeier, Yoan Fourcade, Graham S Frank, Cathryn A Freund, Eduardo Fuentes-Lillo, Sara L Gandy, Dustin G Gannon, Ana I García-Cervigón, Alexis C Garretson, Xuezhen Ge, William L Geary, Charly Géron, Marc Gilles, Antje Girndt, Daniel Gliksman, Harrison B Goldspiel, Dylan G E Gomes, Megan Kate Good, Sarah C Goslee, J Stephen Gosnell, Eliza M Grames, Paolo Gratton, Nicholas M Grebe, Skye M Greenler, Maaike Griffioen, Daniel M Griffith, Frances J Griffith, Jake J Grossman, Ali Güncan, Stef Haesen, James G Hagan, Heather A Hager, Jonathan Philo Harris, Natasha Dean Harrison, Sarah Syedia Hasnain, Justin Chase Havird, Andrew J Heaton, María Laura Herrera-Chaustre, Tanner J Howard, Bin-Yan Hsu, Fabiola Iannarilli, Esperanza C Iranzo, Erik N K Iverson, Saheed Olaide Jimoh, Douglas H Johnson, Martin Johnsson, Jesse Jorna, Tommaso Jucker, Martin Jung, Ineta Kačergytė, Oliver Kaltz, Alison Ke, Clint D Kelly, Katharine Keogan, Friedrich Wolfgang Keppeler, Alexander K Killion, Dongmin Kim, David P Kochan, Peter Korsten, Shan Kothari, Jonas Kuppler, Jillian M Kusch, Malgorzata Lagisz, Kristen Marianne Lalla, Daniel J Larkin, Courtney L Larson, Katherine S Lauck, M Elise Lauterbur, Alan Law, Don-Jean Léandri-Breton, Jonas J Lembrechts, Kiara L'Herpiniere, Eva J P Lievens, Daniela Oliveira de Lima, Shane Lindsay, Martin Luquet, Ross MacLeod, Kirsty H Macphie, Kit Magellan, Magdalena M Mair, Lisa E Malm, Stefano Mammola, Caitlin P Mandeville, Michael Manhart, Laura Milena Manrique-Garzon, Elina Mäntylä, Philippe Marchand, Benjamin Michael Marshall, Charles A Martin, Dominic Andreas Martin, Jake Mitchell Martin, April Robin Martinig, Erin S McCallum, Mark McCauley, Sabrina M McNew, Scott J Meiners, Thomas Merkling, Marcus Michelangeli, Maria Moiron, Bruno Moreira, Jennifer Mortensen, Benjamin Mos, Taofeek Olatunbosun Muraina, Penelope Wrenn Murphy, Luca Nelli, Petri Niemelä, Josh Nightingale, Gustav Nilsonne, Sergio Nolazco, Sabine S Nooten, Jessie Lanterman Novotny, Agnes Birgitta Olin, Chris L Organ, Kate L Ostevik, Facundo Xavier Palacio, Matthieu Paquet, Darren James Parker, David J Pascall, Valerie J Pasquarella, John Harold Paterson, Ana Payo-Payo, Karen Marie Pedersen, Grégoire Perez, Kayla I Perry, Patrice Pottier, Michael J Proulx, Raphaël Proulx, Jessica L Pruett, Veronarindra Ramananjato, Finaritra Tolotra Randimbiarison, Onja H Razafindratsima, Diana J Rennison, Federico Riva, Sepand Riyahi, Michael James Roast, Felipe Pereira Rocha, Dominique G Roche, Cristian Román-Palacios, Michael S Rosenberg, Jessica Ross, Freya E Rowland, Deusdedith Rugemalila, Avery L Russell, Suvi Ruuskanen, Patrick Saccone, Asaf Sadeh, Stephen M Salazar, Kris Sales, Pablo Salmón, Alfredo Sánchez-Tójar, Leticia Pereira Santos, Francesca Santostefano, Hayden T Schilling, Marcus Schmidt, Tim Schmoll, Adam C Schneider, Allie E Schrock, Julia Schroeder, Nicolas Schtickzelle, Nick L Schultz, Drew A Scott, Michael Peter Scroggie, Julie Teresa Shapiro, Nitika Sharma, Caroline L Shearer, Diego Simón, Michael I Sitvarin, Fabrício Luiz Skupien, Heather Lea Slinn, Grania Polly Smith, Jeremy A Smith, Rahel Sollmann, Kaitlin Stack Whitney, Shannon Michael Still, Erica F Stuber, Guy F Sutton, Ben Swallow, Conor Claverie Taff, Elina Takola, Andrew J Tanentzap, Rocío Tarjuelo, Richard J Telford, Christopher J Thawley, Hugo Thierry, Jacqueline Thomson, Svenja Tidau, Emily M Tompkins, Claire Marie Tortorelli, Andrew Trlica, Biz R Turnell, Lara Urban, Stijn Van de Vondel, Jessica Eva Megan van der Wal, Jens Van Eeckhoven, Francis van Oordt, K Michelle Vanderwel, Mark C Vanderwel, Karen J Vanderwolf, Juliana Vélez, Diana Carolina Vergara-Florez, Brian C Verrelli, Marcus Vinícius Vieira, Nora Villamil, Valerio Vitali, Julien Vollering, Jeffrey Walker, Xanthe J Walker, Jonathan A Walter, Pawel Waryszak, Ryan J Weaver, Ronja E M Wedegärtner, Daniel L Weller, Shannon Whelan, Rachel Louise White, David William Wolfson, Andrew Wood, Scott W Yanco, Jian D L Yen, Casey Youngflesh, Giacomo Zilio, Cédric Zimmer, Gregory Mark Zimmerman, Rachel A Zitomer
{"title":"Same data, different analysts: variation in effect sizes due to analytical decisions in ecology and evolutionary biology.","authors":"Elliot Gould, Hannah S Fraser, Timothy H Parker, Shinichi Nakagawa, Simon C Griffith, Peter A Vesk, Fiona Fidler, Daniel G Hamilton, Robin N Abbey-Lee, Jessica K Abbott, Luis A Aguirre, Carles Alcaraz, Irith Aloni, Drew Altschul, Kunal Arekar, Jeff W Atkins, Joe Atkinson, Christopher M Baker, Meghan Barrett, Kristian Bell, Suleiman Kehinde Bello, Iván Beltrán, Bernd J Berauer, Michael Grant Bertram, Peter D Billman, Charlie K Blake, Shannon Blake, Louis Bliard, Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati, Timothée Bonnet, Camille Nina Marion Bordes, Aneesh P H Bose, Thomas Botterill-James, Melissa Anna Boyd, Sarah A Boyle, Tom Bradfer-Lawrence, Jennifer Bradham, Jack A Brand, Martin I Brengdahl, Martin Bulla, Luc Bussière, Ettore Camerlenghi, Sara E Campbell, Leonardo L F Campos, Anthony Caravaggi, Pedro Cardoso, Charles J W Carroll, Therese A Catanach, Xuan Chen, Heung Ying Janet Chik, Emily Sarah Choy, Alec Philip Christie, Angela Chuang, Amanda J Chunco, Bethany L Clark, Andrea Contina, Garth A Covernton, Murray P Cox, Kimberly A Cressman, Marco Crotti, Connor Davidson Crouch, Pietro B D'Amelio, Alexandra Allison de Sousa, Timm Fabian Döbert, Ralph Dobler, Adam J Dobson, Tim S Doherty, Szymon Marian Drobniak, Alexandra Grace Duffy, Alison B Duncan, Robert P Dunn, Jamie Dunning, Trishna Dutta, Luke Eberhart-Hertel, Jared Alan Elmore, Mahmoud Medhat Elsherif, Holly M English, David C Ensminger, Ulrich Rainer Ernst, Stephen M Ferguson, Esteban Fernandez-Juricic, Thalita Ferreira-Arruda, John Fieberg, Elizabeth A Finch, Evan A Fiorenza, David N Fisher, Amélie Fontaine, Wolfgang Forstmeier, Yoan Fourcade, Graham S Frank, Cathryn A Freund, Eduardo Fuentes-Lillo, Sara L Gandy, Dustin G Gannon, Ana I García-Cervigón, Alexis C Garretson, Xuezhen Ge, William L Geary, Charly Géron, Marc Gilles, Antje Girndt, Daniel Gliksman, Harrison B Goldspiel, Dylan G E Gomes, Megan Kate Good, Sarah C Goslee, J Stephen Gosnell, Eliza M Grames, Paolo Gratton, Nicholas M Grebe, Skye M Greenler, Maaike Griffioen, Daniel M Griffith, Frances J Griffith, Jake J Grossman, Ali Güncan, Stef Haesen, James G Hagan, Heather A Hager, Jonathan Philo Harris, Natasha Dean Harrison, Sarah Syedia Hasnain, Justin Chase Havird, Andrew J Heaton, María Laura Herrera-Chaustre, Tanner J Howard, Bin-Yan Hsu, Fabiola Iannarilli, Esperanza C Iranzo, Erik N K Iverson, Saheed Olaide Jimoh, Douglas H Johnson, Martin Johnsson, Jesse Jorna, Tommaso Jucker, Martin Jung, Ineta Kačergytė, Oliver Kaltz, Alison Ke, Clint D Kelly, Katharine Keogan, Friedrich Wolfgang Keppeler, Alexander K Killion, Dongmin Kim, David P Kochan, Peter Korsten, Shan Kothari, Jonas Kuppler, Jillian M Kusch, Malgorzata Lagisz, Kristen Marianne Lalla, Daniel J Larkin, Courtney L Larson, Katherine S Lauck, M Elise Lauterbur, Alan Law, Don-Jean Léandri-Breton, Jonas J Lembrechts, Kiara L'Herpiniere, Eva J P Lievens, Daniela Oliveira de Lima, Shane Lindsay, Martin Luquet, Ross MacLeod, Kirsty H Macphie, Kit Magellan, Magdalena M Mair, Lisa E Malm, Stefano Mammola, Caitlin P Mandeville, Michael Manhart, Laura Milena Manrique-Garzon, Elina Mäntylä, Philippe Marchand, Benjamin Michael Marshall, Charles A Martin, Dominic Andreas Martin, Jake Mitchell Martin, April Robin Martinig, Erin S McCallum, Mark McCauley, Sabrina M McNew, Scott J Meiners, Thomas Merkling, Marcus Michelangeli, Maria Moiron, Bruno Moreira, Jennifer Mortensen, Benjamin Mos, Taofeek Olatunbosun Muraina, Penelope Wrenn Murphy, Luca Nelli, Petri Niemelä, Josh Nightingale, Gustav Nilsonne, Sergio Nolazco, Sabine S Nooten, Jessie Lanterman Novotny, Agnes Birgitta Olin, Chris L Organ, Kate L Ostevik, Facundo Xavier Palacio, Matthieu Paquet, Darren James Parker, David J Pascall, Valerie J Pasquarella, John Harold Paterson, Ana Payo-Payo, Karen Marie Pedersen, Grégoire Perez, Kayla I Perry, Patrice Pottier, Michael J Proulx, Raphaël Proulx, Jessica L Pruett, Veronarindra Ramananjato, Finaritra Tolotra Randimbiarison, Onja H Razafindratsima, Diana J Rennison, Federico Riva, Sepand Riyahi, Michael James Roast, Felipe Pereira Rocha, Dominique G Roche, Cristian Román-Palacios, Michael S Rosenberg, Jessica Ross, Freya E Rowland, Deusdedith Rugemalila, Avery L Russell, Suvi Ruuskanen, Patrick Saccone, Asaf Sadeh, Stephen M Salazar, Kris Sales, Pablo Salmón, Alfredo Sánchez-Tójar, Leticia Pereira Santos, Francesca Santostefano, Hayden T Schilling, Marcus Schmidt, Tim Schmoll, Adam C Schneider, Allie E Schrock, Julia Schroeder, Nicolas Schtickzelle, Nick L Schultz, Drew A Scott, Michael Peter Scroggie, Julie Teresa Shapiro, Nitika Sharma, Caroline L Shearer, Diego Simón, Michael I Sitvarin, Fabrício Luiz Skupien, Heather Lea Slinn, Grania Polly Smith, Jeremy A Smith, Rahel Sollmann, Kaitlin Stack Whitney, Shannon Michael Still, Erica F Stuber, Guy F Sutton, Ben Swallow, Conor Claverie Taff, Elina Takola, Andrew J Tanentzap, Rocío Tarjuelo, Richard J Telford, Christopher J Thawley, Hugo Thierry, Jacqueline Thomson, Svenja Tidau, Emily M Tompkins, Claire Marie Tortorelli, Andrew Trlica, Biz R Turnell, Lara Urban, Stijn Van de Vondel, Jessica Eva Megan van der Wal, Jens Van Eeckhoven, Francis van Oordt, K Michelle Vanderwel, Mark C Vanderwel, Karen J Vanderwolf, Juliana Vélez, Diana Carolina Vergara-Florez, Brian C Verrelli, Marcus Vinícius Vieira, Nora Villamil, Valerio Vitali, Julien Vollering, Jeffrey Walker, Xanthe J Walker, Jonathan A Walter, Pawel Waryszak, Ryan J Weaver, Ronja E M Wedegärtner, Daniel L Weller, Shannon Whelan, Rachel Louise White, David William Wolfson, Andrew Wood, Scott W Yanco, Jian D L Yen, Casey Youngflesh, Giacomo Zilio, Cédric Zimmer, Gregory Mark Zimmerman, Rachel A Zitomer","doi":"10.1186/s12915-024-02101-x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Although variation in effect sizes and predicted values among studies of similar phenomena is inevitable, such variation far exceeds what might be produced by sampling error alone. One possible explanation for variation among results is differences among researchers in the decisions they make regarding statistical analyses. A growing array of studies has explored this analytical variability in different fields and has found substantial variability among results despite analysts having the same data and research question. Many of these studies have been in the social sciences, but one small \"many analyst\" study found similar variability in ecology. We expanded the scope of this prior work by implementing a large-scale empirical exploration of the variation in effect sizes and model predictions generated by the analytical decisions of different researchers in ecology and evolutionary biology. We used two unpublished datasets, one from evolutionary ecology (blue tit, Cyanistes caeruleus, to compare sibling number and nestling growth) and one from conservation ecology (Eucalyptus, to compare grass cover and tree seedling recruitment). The project leaders recruited 174 analyst teams, comprising 246 analysts, to investigate the answers to prespecified research questions. Analyses conducted by these teams yielded 141 usable effects (compatible with our meta-analyses and with all necessary information provided) for the blue tit dataset, and 85 usable effects for the Eucalyptus dataset. We found substantial heterogeneity among results for both datasets, although the patterns of variation differed between them. For the blue tit analyses, the average effect was convincingly negative, with less growth for nestlings living with more siblings, but there was near continuous variation in effect size from large negative effects to effects near zero, and even effects crossing the traditional threshold of statistical significance in the opposite direction. In contrast, the average relationship between grass cover and Eucalyptus seedling number was only slightly negative and not convincingly different from zero, and most effects ranged from weakly negative to weakly positive, with about a third of effects crossing the traditional threshold of significance in one direction or the other. However, there were also several striking outliers in the Eucalyptus dataset, with effects far from zero. For both datasets, we found substantial variation in the variable selection and random effects structures among analyses, as well as in the ratings of the analytical methods by peer reviewers, but we found no strong relationship between any of these and deviation from the meta-analytic mean. In other words, analyses with results that were far from the mean were no more or less likely to have dissimilar variable sets, use random effects in their models, or receive poor peer reviews than those analyses that found results that were close to the mean. The existence of substantial variability among analysis outcomes raises important questions about how ecologists and evolutionary biologists should interpret published results, and how they should conduct analyses in the future.</p>","PeriodicalId":9339,"journal":{"name":"BMC Biology","volume":"23 1","pages":"35"},"PeriodicalIF":4.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11804095/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"BMC Biology","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-024-02101-x","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Although variation in effect sizes and predicted values among studies of similar phenomena is inevitable, such variation far exceeds what might be produced by sampling error alone. One possible explanation for variation among results is differences among researchers in the decisions they make regarding statistical analyses. A growing array of studies has explored this analytical variability in different fields and has found substantial variability among results despite analysts having the same data and research question. Many of these studies have been in the social sciences, but one small "many analyst" study found similar variability in ecology. We expanded the scope of this prior work by implementing a large-scale empirical exploration of the variation in effect sizes and model predictions generated by the analytical decisions of different researchers in ecology and evolutionary biology. We used two unpublished datasets, one from evolutionary ecology (blue tit, Cyanistes caeruleus, to compare sibling number and nestling growth) and one from conservation ecology (Eucalyptus, to compare grass cover and tree seedling recruitment). The project leaders recruited 174 analyst teams, comprising 246 analysts, to investigate the answers to prespecified research questions. Analyses conducted by these teams yielded 141 usable effects (compatible with our meta-analyses and with all necessary information provided) for the blue tit dataset, and 85 usable effects for the Eucalyptus dataset. We found substantial heterogeneity among results for both datasets, although the patterns of variation differed between them. For the blue tit analyses, the average effect was convincingly negative, with less growth for nestlings living with more siblings, but there was near continuous variation in effect size from large negative effects to effects near zero, and even effects crossing the traditional threshold of statistical significance in the opposite direction. In contrast, the average relationship between grass cover and Eucalyptus seedling number was only slightly negative and not convincingly different from zero, and most effects ranged from weakly negative to weakly positive, with about a third of effects crossing the traditional threshold of significance in one direction or the other. However, there were also several striking outliers in the Eucalyptus dataset, with effects far from zero. For both datasets, we found substantial variation in the variable selection and random effects structures among analyses, as well as in the ratings of the analytical methods by peer reviewers, but we found no strong relationship between any of these and deviation from the meta-analytic mean. In other words, analyses with results that were far from the mean were no more or less likely to have dissimilar variable sets, use random effects in their models, or receive poor peer reviews than those analyses that found results that were close to the mean. The existence of substantial variability among analysis outcomes raises important questions about how ecologists and evolutionary biologists should interpret published results, and how they should conduct analyses in the future.

查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
相同的数据,不同的分析人员:由于生态学和进化生物学的分析决策,影响大小的变化。
虽然在类似现象的研究中,效应大小和预测值的差异是不可避免的,但这种差异远远超过了单独抽样误差可能产生的差异。对结果差异的一个可能解释是,研究人员在统计分析方面做出的决定存在差异。越来越多的研究在不同领域探索了这种分析的可变性,并发现尽管分析人员拥有相同的数据和研究问题,但结果却存在很大的可变性。其中许多研究都是在社会科学领域进行的,但一项小型的“许多分析师”研究发现,生态学也存在类似的可变性。我们通过对生态学和进化生物学中不同研究人员的分析决策所产生的效应大小和模型预测的变化进行大规模的实证探索,扩大了这项先前工作的范围。我们使用了两个未发表的数据集,一个来自进化生态学(蓝山雀,蓝山雀,用于比较兄弟姐妹数量和雏鸟生长),另一个来自保护生态学(桉树,用于比较草皮覆盖和树苗招募)。项目负责人招募了174个分析师团队,其中包括246名分析师,以调查预先指定的研究问题的答案。这些团队进行的分析为蓝山雀数据集产生了141个可用效果(与我们的荟萃分析和提供的所有必要信息兼容),为桉树数据集产生了85个可用效果。我们发现两个数据集的结果存在很大的异质性,尽管它们之间的变化模式有所不同。对于蓝山雀的分析,平均影响是令人信服的负影响,与更多的兄弟姐妹生活在一起的雏鸟生长较少,但效应大小几乎是连续变化的,从很大的负面影响到接近零的影响,甚至在相反的方向上,影响超过了传统的统计显著性阈值。相比之下,草盖度与桉树幼苗数之间的平均关系仅为轻微负相关,没有令人信服的零差异,大多数效应介于弱负到弱正之间,约三分之一的效应在一个方向或另一个方向上超过了传统的显著性阈值。然而,在Eucalyptus数据集中也有几个显著的异常值,其影响远远不是零。对于这两个数据集,我们发现分析中的变量选择和随机效应结构以及同行审稿人对分析方法的评分存在很大差异,但我们发现这些与偏离元分析平均值之间没有很强的关系。换句话说,与发现结果接近平均值的分析相比,结果远离平均值的分析不太可能有不同的变量集,在模型中使用随机效应,或者得到较差的同行评议。分析结果之间存在着巨大的可变性,这提出了一些重要的问题,即生态学家和进化生物学家应该如何解释已发表的结果,以及他们应该如何在未来进行分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
BMC Biology
BMC Biology 生物-生物学
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
1.90%
发文量
260
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: BMC Biology is a broad scope journal covering all areas of biology. Our content includes research articles, new methods and tools. BMC Biology also publishes reviews, Q&A, and commentaries.
期刊最新文献
Geographical variation of chemical signals and odor discrimination in the great Himalayan leaf-nosed bat (Hipposideros armiger). Single-cell analysis of a salmonid immune system (river brown trout Salmo trutta fario) reveals evolutionary divergence and hatchery-induced transcriptional reprogramming. Unraveling the diagnostic and prognostic signatures of oral microbiota in head and neck cancer. LAMB1 regulates COL3A1 and RAC1 expression during subchorionic hemorrhage progression. 6-mercaptopurine and tofacitinib alter microbial protein expression but not composition in fecal microbiota incubations from Crohn's disease patients.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1