Sources & Testing

Source hierarchy

When citing or summarizing information, we prioritize:

  1. peer-reviewed research and meta-analyses

  2. academic textbooks and established reference works

  3. reputable institutions and professional bodies

  4. high-quality reporting that accurately references primary sources

We avoid:

  • sensational claims

  • “miracle” language

  • low-quality summaries without citations

  • unverified anecdotes presented as fact

What we verify

Before publishing, we check:

  • definitions and key claims

  • whether the advice is realistic for the target audience

  • whether recommendations have known contraindications or risks

  • whether there are clearer alternatives

Practical validation (“testing”)

For frameworks, templates, and checklists, we validate usefulness by ensuring:

  • steps are actionable and measurable

  • the method works in common real-world constraints

  • the plan includes an “if this fails, do this instead” option

Transparency about uncertainty

If evidence is mixed or limited, we:

  • say so explicitly

  • present multiple plausible interpretations

  • avoid overconfidence

Update cadence

Core guides are reviewed periodically. If a page is updated materially, we show:

  • Last updated: [YYYY-MM-DD]

  • what changed (when relevant)