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What helps and hinders reproducible research? Researchers’ perspectives from a cross-disciplinary interview study

Abstract:
Debates and policy initiatives addressing research reproducibility have expanded considerably in recent years. Yet, many of these measures remain generic and risk overlooking the lived realities of research practice. This study aims to explore researchers’ perspectives on the barriers, facilitators, and motivators that shape reproducible research across diverse fields and career stages, using qualitative methods. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 60 researchers affiliated with universities and research institutions across the European Union and the United Kingdom. Participants were sampled to ensure diversity in discipline, career stage, gender, and geography. The interviews explored experiences with barriers and facilitators for reproducible research, and the data were analyzed using framework analysis with a hybrid inductive–deductive approach. Five interrelated themes described barriers and facilitators influencing reproducibility: navigating the research ecosystem (incentives and policies of institutions, journals, and funders); social and cultural dynamics as drivers and barriers (disciplinary norms, generational differences, competition, and collaboration); resourcing reproducibility (skills, infrastructure, guidelines and standards, time, funding, and awareness); inside the research process (field-specific constraints, methodological transparency, research material sharing, and external restrictions); and personal commitment to shared responsibility (reflective motivations, pragmatic drivers, and perceptions of accountability). Researchers described reproducibility as less of an individual choice but as a socially and institutionally mediated activity, dependent on enabling conditions such as supportive policies, adequate infrastructure, and equitable resource distribution. Reproducibility reform cannot rely solely on individual researcher commitment or one-size-fits-all policies. Effective interventions must account for disciplinary and methodological diversity, provide targeted resources and training, and realign incentive structures to reward transparency and rigour. These findings highlight reproducibility as a collective responsibility across the research ecosystem, requiring coordinated action by researchers, institutions, funders, and publishers. Promoting reproducible practices in this systemic, context-sensitive manner is essential for fostering a more credible, equitable, and sustainable scientific enterprise.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1371/journal.pone.0348512

Authors

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Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0003-0333-4279
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Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0001-8286-1995
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Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-3986-8312


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Funder identifier:
10.13039/100018693
Grant:
101094725


Publisher:
Public Library of Science
Journal:
PLoS ONE More from this journal
Volume:
21
Issue:
5
Pages:
e0348512
Article number:
e0348512
Publication date:
2026-05-20
Acceptance date:
2026-04-15
DOI:
EISSN:
1932-6203
ISSN:
1932-6203


Language:
English
Source identifiers:
4065230
Deposit date:
2026-05-20
ARK identifier:
This ORA record was generated from metadata provided by an external service. It has not been edited by the ORA Team.

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