| Literature DB >> 25296159 |
R Chris Fraley1, Simine Vazire2.
Abstract
The authors evaluate the quality of research reported in major journals in social-personality psychology by ranking those journals with respect to their N-pact Factors (NF)-the statistical power of the empirical studies they publish to detect typical effect sizes. Power is a particularly important attribute for evaluating research quality because, relative to studies that have low power, studies that have high power are more likely to (a) to provide accurate estimates of effects, (b) to produce literatures with low false positive rates, and (c) to lead to replicable findings. The authors show that the average sample size in social-personality research is 104 and that the power to detect the typical effect size in the field is approximately 50%. Moreover, they show that there is considerable variation among journals in sample sizes and power of the studies they publish, with some journals consistently publishing higher power studies than others. The authors hope that these rankings will be of use to authors who are choosing where to submit their best work, provide hiring and promotion committees with a superior way of quantifying journal quality, and encourage competition among journals to improve their NF rankings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25296159 PMCID: PMC4189949 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Correct and Incorrect Conclusions in NHST.
| REALITY | ||
| CONCLUSION | Null hypothesis is true | Research hypothesis is true |
| Null hypothesis is true | A. Correct rejection (probability = 1 – α) | C. Type II error (probability = β) |
| Research hypothesis is true | B. Type I error (probability = α) | D. Correct hit (probability = 1 - β)(power) |
Note. In Null Hypothesis Significance Testing (NHST), the null hypothesis of no effect or no difference is either true (cells A and B) or false (cells C and D). When the null hypothesis is true (i.e., the left-hand column), it is possible for a researcher to make an incorrect decision by obtaining a significant result and rejecting the null hypothesis (cell B). The probability of this happening is equal to α and is set to 5%, by convention, to help minimize the false positive. When the null hypothesis is false (i.e., the right-hand column), the researcher can make a correct decision by obtaining a significant result (cell D). The probability of this happening is (1 – β), or the statistical power of the test. When the null hypothesis is false, one can make an inferential error by failing to obtain a significant result (cell C). This error rate is defined as beta (β) and is commonly referred to as Type II error.
Median Sample Sizes for each Six Empirical Journals in Social/Personality Psychology.
| Year | ||||||
| 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | NF-5 | |
|
| 211 | 160 | 162 | 184.5 | 173 | 178.1 |
|
| 81 | 126 | 165 | 133 | 140 | 129 |
|
| 112 | 86 | 89 | 96.5 | 89.5 | 94.6 |
|
| 80 | 86.5 | 93 | 95 | 96 | 90.1 |
|
| 114 | 55.5 | 88 | 77 | 98 | 86.5 |
|
| 67 | 91 | 51.5 | 78.5 | 76 | 72.8 |
Note. NF-5 = 5-year N-pact Factor. JP = Journal of Personality, JRP = Journal of Research in Personality, PSPB = Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, JPSP = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, JESP = Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, PS = Psychological Science (social/personality articles only).
Correlations Among 1-year N-pact Factors, 5-year N-pact Factors, and Citation Impact Factors across the Six Journals Studied.
| 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | NF-5 | |
| 2006 | 1.00 | |||||
| 2007 | .61 | 1.00 | ||||
| 2008 | .55 | .79 | 1.00 | |||
| 2009 | .78 | .95 | .88 | 1.00 | ||
| 2010 | .75 | .87 | .94 | .96 | 1.00 | |
| NF-5 | .82 | .91 | .90 | .99 | .98 | 1.00 |
| IF | −.46 | −.25 | −.57 | −.40 | −.49 | −.48 |
Note. The upper matrix represents the stability of rank ordering of journal's 1-year N-pact Factors (NFs) from 2006–2010. The lower rows represent the correlations among NFs in any one year and the NF-5 and the citation Impact Factors (IF) of journals.
Statistical Power to Detect Various Population Effect Sizes across Journals.
| Population Effect Size ( | |||||
| .10 | .20 | .30 | .40 | .50 | |
|
| .27 | .77 | .98 | .99 | .99 |
|
| .20 | .63 | .94 | .99 | .99 |
|
| .16 | .49 | .84 | .98 | .99 |
|
| .16 | .48 | .83 | .98 | .99 |
|
| .15 | .46 | .81 | .97 | .99 |
|
| .13 | .40 | .74 | .95 | .99 |
|
| .14 | .43 | .78 | .96 | .99 |
|
| .16 | .49 | .84 | .98 | .99 |
|
| .20 | .60 | .92 | .99 | .99 |
Note. JP = Journal of Personality, JRP = Journal of Research in Personality, PSPB = Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, JPSP = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, JESP = Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, PS = Psychological Science (social/personality articles only), JPSP:ASC = Attitudes and Social Cognition section of JPSP, JPSP:IRGP = Interpersonal Relations and Group Processes section of JPSP, JPSP:PPID = Personality Processes and Individual Differences section of JPSP. Power values assume a two-tailed test with an alpha level of .05.
Figure 1Rankings of Journals in Social-Personality Psychology with Respect to their Statistical Power.
JP = Journal of Personality, JRP = Journal of Research in Personality, PSPB = Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, JPSP = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, JESP = Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, PS = Psychological Science (social/personality articles only). The hashed line represents the statistical power (80%) recommended by Cohen (1992).
Estimated False Positive Rates of Findings Published across Journals, Assuming no Questionable Research Practices.
|
| ||
| .50 | .80 | |
|
| .06 | .21 |
|
| .07 | .24 |
|
| .09 | .29 |
|
| .09 | .29 |
|
| .10 | .30 |
|
| .11 | .33 |
|
| .10 | .32 |
|
| .09 | .29 |
|
| .08 | .25 |
Note. P(H0) = the a priori probability that the null hypothesis is true in a given research area. JP = Journal of Personality, JRP = Journal of Research in Personality, PSPB = Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, JPSP = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, JESP = Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, PS = Psychological Science (social/personality articles only), JPSP:ASC = Attitudes and Social Cognition section of JPSP, JPSP:IRGP = Interpersonal Relations and Group Processes section of JPSP, JPSP:PPID = Personality Processes and Individual Differences section of JPSP.
Figure 2Journals plotted in a two-dimensional space defined by their 5-year N-Pact Factors (NF-5) and their citation Impact Factors.