Innovation and Integrity in Intervention Research: Conceptual Issues,Methodology, and Knowledge Translation |
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Authors: | Tina Malti Andreas Beelmann Gil G. Noam Simon Sommer |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Psychology and Department of Psychiatry,University of Toronto,Toronto,Canada;2.Department of Psychology,Friedrich Schiller University Jena,Jena,Germany;3.Program in Education, Afterschool, and Resiliency,McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School,Boston,USA;4.Jacobs Foundation,Zürich,Switzerland |
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Abstract: | In this article, we introduce the special issue entitled Innovation and Integrity in Intervention Science. Its focus is on essential problems and prospects for intervention research examining two related topics, i.e., methodological issues and research integrity, and challenges in the transfer of research knowledge into practice and policy. The main aims are to identify how to advance methodology in order to improve research quality, examine scientific integrity in the field of intervention science, and discuss future steps to enhance the transfer of knowledge about evidence-based intervention principles into sustained practice, routine activities, and policy decisions. Themes of the special issue are twofold. The first includes questions about research methodology in intervention science, both in terms of research design and methods, as well as data analyses and the reporting of findings. Second, the issue tackles questions surrounding the types of knowledge translation frameworks that might be beneficial to mobilize the transfer of research-based knowledge into practice and public policies. The issue argues that innovations in methodology and thoughtful approaches to knowledge translation can enable transparency, quality, and sustainability of intervention research. |
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