| Literature DB >> 30511155 |
David Trafimow1, Hunter A Myüz2.
Abstract
After obtaining a sample of published, peer-reviewed articles from journals with high and low impact factors in social, cognitive, neuro-, developmental, and clinical psychology, we used a priori equations recently derived by Trafimow (Educational and Psychological Measurement, 77, 831-854, 2017; Trafimow & MacDonald in Educational and Psychological Measurement, 77, 204-219, 2017) to compute the articles' median levels of precision. Our findings indicate that developmental research performs best with respect to precision, whereas cognitive research performs the worst; however, none of the psychology subfields excelled. In addition, we found important differences in precision between journals in the upper versus lower echelons with respect to impact factors in cognitive, neuro-, and clinical psychology, whereas the difference was dramatically attenuated for social and developmental psychology. Implications are discussed.Keywords: A priori equations; A priori procedure; Comparing subfields; Precision; Sampling precision
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30511155 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-018-1173-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Methods ISSN: 1554-351X