Literature DB >> 29068778

Psychology's Renaissance.

Leif D Nelson1, Joseph Simmons2, Uri Simonsohn2.   

Abstract

In 2010-2012, a few largely coincidental events led experimental psychologists to realize that their approach to collecting, analyzing, and reporting data made it too easy to publish false-positive findings. This sparked a period of methodological reflection that we review here and call Psychology's Renaissance. We begin by describing how psychologists' concerns with publication bias shifted from worrying about file-drawered studies to worrying about p-hacked analyses. We then review the methodological changes that psychologists have proposed and, in some cases, embraced. In describing how the renaissance has unfolded, we attempt to describe different points of view fairly but not neutrally, so as to identify the most promising paths forward. In so doing, we champion disclosure and preregistration, express skepticism about most statistical solutions to publication bias, take positions on the analysis and interpretation of replication failures, and contend that meta-analytical thinking increases the prevalence of false positives. Our general thesis is that the scientific practices of experimental psychologists have improved dramatically.

Entities:  

Keywords:  false positives; methodology; p-hacking; preregistration; publication bias; renaissance

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29068778     DOI: 10.1146/annurev-psych-122216-011836

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol        ISSN: 0066-4308            Impact factor:   24.137


  44 in total

1.  The New Statistics for Better Science: Ask How Much, How Uncertain, and What Else is Known.

Authors:  Robert J Calin-Jageman; Geoff Cumming
Journal:  Am Stat       Date:  2019-03-20       Impact factor: 8.710

2.  What can be learned from growth mindset controversies?

Authors:  David S Yeager; Carol S Dweck
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2020-12

3.  From social brains to social robots: applying neurocognitive insights to human-robot interaction.

Authors:  Emily S Cross; Ruud Hortensius; Agnieszka Wykowska
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Comparing meta-analyses and preregistered multiple-laboratory replication projects.

Authors:  Amanda Kvarven; Eirik Strømland; Magnus Johannesson
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2019-12-23

5.  An Overview of Scientific Reproducibility: Consideration of Relevant Issues for Behavior Science/Analysis.

Authors:  Sean Laraway; Susan Snycerski; Sean Pradhan; Bradley E Huitema
Journal:  Perspect Behav Sci       Date:  2019-03-22

Review 6.  Informal versus formal judgment of statistical models: The case of normality assumptions.

Authors:  Anthony J Bishara; Jiexiang Li; Christian Conley
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-03-03

Review 7.  Reproducible research into human chemical communication by cues and pheromones: learning from psychology's renaissance.

Authors:  Tristram D Wyatt
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2020-04-20       Impact factor: 6.237

8.  The Psychological Science Accelerator: Advancing Psychology through a Distributed Collaborative Network.

Authors:  Hannah Moshontz; Lorne Campbell; Charles R Ebersole; Hans IJzerman; Heather L Urry; Patrick S Forscher; Jon E Grahe; Randy J McCarthy; Erica D Musser; Jan Antfolk; Christopher M Castille; Thomas Rhys Evans; Susann Fiedler; Jessica Kay Flake; Diego A Forero; Steve M J Janssen; Justin Robert Keene; John Protzko; Balazs Aczel; Sara Álvarez Solas; Daniel Ansari; Dana Awlia; Ernest Baskin; Carlota Batres; Martha Lucia Borras-Guevara; Cameron Brick; Priyanka Chandel; Armand Chatard; William J Chopik; David Clarance; Nicholas A Coles; Katherine S Corker; Barnaby James Wyld Dixson; Vilius Dranseika; Yarrow Dunham; Nicholas W Fox; Gwendolyn Gardiner; S Mason Garrison; Tripat Gill; Amanda C Hahn; Bastian Jaeger; Pavol Kačmár; Gwenaël Kaminski; Philipp Kanske; Zoltan Kekecs; Melissa Kline; Monica A Koehn; Pratibha Kujur; Carmel A Levitan; Jeremy K Miller; Ceylan Okan; Jerome Olsen; Oscar Oviedo-Trespalacios; Asil Ali Özdoğru; Babita Pande; Arti Parganiha; Noorshama Parveen; Gerit Pfuhl; Sraddha Pradhan; Ivan Ropovik; Nicholas O Rule; Blair Saunders; Vidar Schei; Kathleen Schmidt; Margaret Messiah Singh; Miroslav Sirota; Crystal N Steltenpohl; Stefan Stieger; Daniel Storage; Gavin Brent Sullivan; Anna Szabelska; Christian K Tamnes; Miguel A Vadillo; Jaroslava V Valentova; Wolf Vanpaemel; Marco A C Varella; Evie Vergauwe; Mark Verschoor; Michelangelo Vianello; Martin Voracek; Glenn P Williams; John Paul Wilson; Janis H Zickfeld; Jack D Arnal; Burak Aydin; Sau-Chin Chen; Lisa M DeBruine; Ana Maria Fernandez; Kai T Horstmann; Peder M Isager; Benedict Jones; Aycan Kapucu; Hause Lin; Michael C Mensink; Gorka Navarrete; Miguel A Silan; Christopher R Chartier
Journal:  Adv Methods Pract Psychol Sci       Date:  2018-10-01

9.  Is Healthy Neuroticism Associated with Health Behaviors? A Coordinated Integrative Data Analysis.

Authors:  Eileen K Graham; Sara J Weston; Nicholas A Turiano; Damaris Aschwanden; Tom Booth; Fleur Harrison; Bryan D James; Nathan A Lewis; Steven R Makkar; Swantje Mueller; Kristi M Wisniewski; Tomiko Yoneda; Ruixue Zhaoyang; Avron Spiro; Sherry Willis; K Warner Schaie; Martin Sliwinski; Richard A Lipton; Mindy J Katz; Ian J Deary; Elizabeth M Zelinski; David A Bennett; Perminder S Sachdev; Henry Brodaty; Julian N Trollor; David Ames; Margaret J Wright; Denis Gerstorf; Mathias Allemand; Johanna Drewelies; Gert G Wagner; Graciela Muniz-Terrera; Andrea M Piccinin; Scott M Hofer; Daniel K Mroczek
Journal:  Collabra Psychol       Date:  2020-07-21

10.  Response to Commentaries on Sakaluk (2020).

Authors:  John K Sakaluk
Journal:  Arch Sex Behav       Date:  2021-06-09
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