Literature DB >> 26168113

Science or Art? How Aesthetic Standards Grease the Way Through the Publication Bottleneck but Undermine Science.

Roger Giner-Sorolla1.   

Abstract

The current crisis in psychological research involves issues of fraud, replication, publication bias, and false positive results. I argue that this crisis follows the failure of widely adopted solutions to psychology's similar crisis of the 1970s. The untouched root cause is an information-economic one: Too many studies divided by too few publication outlets equals a bottleneck. Articles cannot pass through just by showing theoretical meaning and methodological rigor; their results must appear to support the hypothesis perfectly. Consequently, psychologists must master the art of presenting perfect-looking results just to survive in the profession. This favors aesthetic criteria of presentation in a way that harms science's search for truth. Shallow standards of statistical perfection distort analyses and undermine the accuracy of cumulative data; narrative expectations encourage dishonesty about the relationship between results and hypotheses; criteria of novelty suppress replication attempts. Concerns about truth in research are emerging in other sciences and may eventually descend on our heads in the form of difficult and insensitive regulations. I suggest a more palatable solution: to open the bottleneck, putting structures in place to reward broader forms of information sharing beyond the exquisite art of present-day journal publication.
© The Author(s) 2012.

Keywords:  methodology; publishing; statistics

Year:  2012        PMID: 26168113     DOI: 10.1177/1745691612457576

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Perspect Psychol Sci        ISSN: 1745-6916


  26 in total

1.  Unpredictability increases the error-related negativity in children and adolescents.

Authors:  Brittany C Speed; Felicia Jackson; Brady D Nelson; Zachary P Infantolino; Greg Hajcak
Journal:  Brain Cogn       Date:  2017-09-23       Impact factor: 2.310

2.  Thinking About Data, Research Methods, and Statistical Analyses: Commentary on Sijtsma's (2014) "Playing with Data".

Authors:  Irwin D Waldman; Scott O Lilienfeld
Journal:  Psychometrika       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 2.500

3.  Converging electrophysiological evidence for a processing advantage of social over nonsocial feedback.

Authors:  Daniela M Pfabigan; Shihui Han
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 3.282

4.  The volatile nature of positive affect effects: opposite effects of positive affect and time on task on proactive control.

Authors:  Carmen Hefer; Gesine Dreisbach
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2018-09-04

5.  Infants' ability to extract three-dimensional shape from coherent motion.

Authors:  Amy Hirshkowitz; Teresa Wilcox
Journal:  Infant Behav Dev       Date:  2013-10-30

6.  Deep impact: unintended consequences of journal rank.

Authors:  Björn Brembs; Katherine Button; Marcus Munafò
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2013-06-24       Impact factor: 3.169

7.  The preregistration revolution.

Authors:  Brian A Nosek; Charles R Ebersole; Alexander C DeHaven; David T Mellor
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-03-13       Impact factor: 12.779

8.  Why selective publication of statistically significant results can be effective.

Authors:  Joost de Winter; Riender Happee
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-06-20       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Triple P-Positive Parenting programs: the folly of basing social policy on underpowered flawed studies.

Authors:  James C Coyne; Linda Kwakkenbos
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2013-01-16       Impact factor: 8.775

Review 10.  Publication and other reporting biases in cognitive sciences: detection, prevalence, and prevention.

Authors:  John P A Ioannidis; Marcus R Munafò; Paolo Fusar-Poli; Brian A Nosek; Sean P David
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2014-03-18       Impact factor: 20.229

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