| Literature DB >> 28265523 |
Abstract
Head et al. (2015) provided a large collection of p-values that, from their perspective, indicates widespread statistical significance seeking (i.e., p-hacking). This paper inspects this result for robustness. Theoretically, the p-value distribution should be a smooth, decreasing function, but the distribution of reported p-values shows systematically more reported p-values for .01, .02, .03, .04, and .05 than p-values reported to three decimal places, due to apparent tendencies to round p-values to two decimal places. Head et al. (2015) correctly argue that an aggregate p-value distribution could show a bump below .05 when left-skew p-hacking occurs frequently. Moreover, the elimination of p = .045 and p = .05, as done in the original paper, is debatable. Given that eliminating p = .045 is a result of the need for symmetric bins and systematically more p-values are reported to two decimal places than to three decimal places, I did not exclude p = .045 and p = .05. I conducted Fisher's method .04 < p < .05 and reanalyzed the data by adjusting the bin selection to .03875 < p ≤ .04 versus .04875 < p ≤ .05. Results of the reanalysis indicate that no evidence for left-skew p-hacking remains when we look at the entire range between .04 < p < .05 or when we inspect the second-decimal. Taking into account reporting tendencies when selecting the bins to compare is especially important because this dataset does not allow for the recalculation of the p-values. Moreover, inspecting the bins that include two-decimal reported p-values potentially increases sensitivity if strategic rounding down of p-values as a form of p-hacking is widespread. Given the far-reaching implications of supposed widespread p-hacking throughout the sciences Head et al. (2015), it is important that these findings are robust to data analysis choices if the conclusion is to be considered unequivocal. Although no evidence of widespread left-skew p-hacking is found in this reanalysis, this does not mean that there is no p-hacking at all. These results nuance the conclusion by Head et al. (2015), indicating that the results are not robust and that the evidence for widespread left-skew p-hacking is ambiguous at best.Entities:
Keywords: Nhst; P-hacking; P-values; Qrps; Questionable research practices; Reanalysis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28265523 PMCID: PMC5337083 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Histograms of p-values as selected in Head et al. (in green; .04 < p < .045 versus .045 < p < .05), the significant p-value distribution as selected in Head et al. (in grey; 0 < p ≤ .00125, .00125 < p ≤ .0025, …, .0475 < p ≤ .04875, .04875 < p < .05, binwidth = .00125).
The green and grey histograms exclude p = .045 and p = .05; the black histogram shows the frequencies of results that are omitted because of this (.04375 < p ≤ .045 and .04875 < p ≤ .05, binwidth = .00125).
Results of the reanalysis across various binwidths (i.e., .00125, .005, .01) and different sections of the paper.
| Abstracts | Results | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Binwidth = .00125 | .03875 < | 4,597 | 26,047 |
| .04875 < | 2,565 | 18,664 | |
| 0.358 | 0.417 | ||
| >.999 | >.999 | ||
| <.001 | <.001 | ||
| Binwidth = .005 | .035 < | 6,641 | 38,537 |
| .045 < | 4,485 | 30,406 | |
| 0.403 | 0.441 | ||
| >.999 | >.999 | ||
| <.001 | <.001 | ||
| Binwidth = .01 | .03 < | 9,885 | 58,809 |
| .04 < | 7,250 | 47,755 | |
| 0.423 | 0.448 | ||
| >.999 | >.999 | ||
| <.001 | <.001 |