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The Proteus phenomenon is the tendency in science for early replications of a work to contradict the original findings, a consequence of publication bias. It is akin to the winner's curse. The term was coined by John Ioannidis and Thomas A. Trikalinos in 2005 named after the Greek god Proteus who could rapidly change his appearance. A 2013 paper argued that the phenomenon might be "desirable or even optimal" from a scientific standpoint.

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  • Fenómeno de Proteo (es)
  • Proteus phenomenon (en)
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  • El fenómeno de Proteo es una tendencia de la ciencia por la cual las primeras reproducciones de un trabajo contradicen los hallazgos originales, una consecuencia del sesgo de publicación.​ Es similar a la maldición del ganador.​ El término fue acuñado por John Ioannidis y Thomas A. Trikalinos en 2005, llamado así por el dios griego Proteo, quien podía cambiar rápidamente su apariencia.​ Un artículo de 2013 argumentó que el fenómeno podría ser «deseable o incluso óptimo», desde un punto de vista científico.​ (es)
  • The Proteus phenomenon is the tendency in science for early replications of a work to contradict the original findings, a consequence of publication bias. It is akin to the winner's curse. The term was coined by John Ioannidis and Thomas A. Trikalinos in 2005 named after the Greek god Proteus who could rapidly change his appearance. A 2013 paper argued that the phenomenon might be "desirable or even optimal" from a scientific standpoint. (en)
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  • El fenómeno de Proteo es una tendencia de la ciencia por la cual las primeras reproducciones de un trabajo contradicen los hallazgos originales, una consecuencia del sesgo de publicación.​ Es similar a la maldición del ganador.​ El término fue acuñado por John Ioannidis y Thomas A. Trikalinos en 2005, llamado así por el dios griego Proteo, quien podía cambiar rápidamente su apariencia.​ Un artículo de 2013 argumentó que el fenómeno podría ser «deseable o incluso óptimo», desde un punto de vista científico.​ (es)
  • The Proteus phenomenon is the tendency in science for early replications of a work to contradict the original findings, a consequence of publication bias. It is akin to the winner's curse. The term was coined by John Ioannidis and Thomas A. Trikalinos in 2005 named after the Greek god Proteus who could rapidly change his appearance. A 2013 paper argued that the phenomenon might be "desirable or even optimal" from a scientific standpoint. (en)
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