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  2. Substack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substack

    In March 2021, Substack revealed that it had been experimenting with a revenue sharing program in which it paid advances for writers to create publications on its platform; this became a program known as Substack Pro. [4] Substack has been criticized for not disclosing which writers were part of Substack Pro. [46]

  3. Wikipedia : Identifying and using self-published works

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Identifying_and...

    The author(s) creates a publication, e.g., The Company Newsletter or The Weekly School News. The author is frequently a group, e.g., an organization's marketing department or a fundraising team, but it may be a single-person publication (e.g., Substack newsletters). The author decides what stories to include, and writes them.

  4. FACT CHECK: Was Luigi Mangione’s Manifesto Published On Substack?

    www.aol.com/fact-check-luigi-mangione-manifesto...

    According to a post shared on X by user @quantian1, the purported manifesto is fake, as the Substack account was only two hours old at the time the writing went live. A screenshot included in the ...

  5. Policy-based evidence making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Policy-based_evidence_making

    "Policy-based evidence making" is a pejorative term which refers to the commissioning of research in order to support a policy which has already been decided upon. It is the converse of evidence-based policy making. [1] As the name suggests, policy-based evidence making means working back from a predefined policy to produce underpinning evidence.

  6. Hierarchy of evidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchy_of_evidence

    A large number of hierarchies of evidence have been proposed. Similar protocols for evaluation of research quality are still in development. So far, the available protocols pay relatively little attention to whether outcome research is relevant to efficacy (the outcome of a treatment performed under ideal conditions) or to effectiveness (the outcome of the treatment performed under ordinary ...

  7. Substack said it removed some newsletters after criticism ...

    www.aol.com/news/substack-said-removed...

    Substack said that after a review, it had decided that the five publications had violated the company’s existing content rules, which prohibit content that incites violence based on protected ...

  8. Scholarly peer review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scholarly_peer_review

    After a manuscript is published, the process of peer review continues as publications are read, known as post-publication peer review. Readers will often send letters to the editor of a journal, or correspond with the editor via an on-line journal club. In this way, all "peers" may offer review and critique of published literature.

  9. Carl Heneghan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Heneghan

    Professor Heneghan is the Director of Programs in Evidence-Based Health Care at the University of Oxford, running since 2000 as the largest part time program in the Medical Sciences Division. [9] Heneghan writes regularly in the media, including at the Spectator and, along with Tom Jefferson, created the substack Trust the Evidence. [10] [11]

  1. Related searches substack publication vs post central time mean level of evidence definition

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