| Literature DB >> 30789796 |
Anton Olsson-Collentine1, Marcel A L M van Assen1,2, Chris H J Hartgerink1.
Abstract
We examined the percentage of p values (.05 < p ≤ .10) reported as marginally significant in 44,200 articles, across nine psychology disciplines, published in 70 journals belonging to the American Psychological Association between 1985 and 2016. Using regular expressions, we extracted 42,504 p values between .05 and .10. Almost 40% of p values in this range were reported as marginally significant, although there were considerable differences between disciplines. The practice is most common in organizational psychology (45.4%) and least common in clinical psychology (30.1%). Contrary to what was reported by previous researchers, our results showed no evidence of an increasing trend in any discipline; in all disciplines, the percentage of p values reported as marginally significant was decreasing or constant over time. We recommend against reporting these results as marginally significant because of the low evidential value of p values between .05 and .10.Entities:
Keywords: values; APA; marginal significance; null-hypothesis significance testing; open data; open materials; over time
Year: 2019 PMID: 30789796 PMCID: PMC6472145 DOI: 10.1177/0956797619830326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976
Summary of Data per Discipline
| Discipline | Number of journals | Number of articles with | Number of | Number of | Number of | Number of | Marginal significance (%)[ | Marginal significance in article (%)[ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All APA journals | 70 | 44,200 | 777,596 | 17.59 | 42,504 | 0.96 | 39.60 [39.13, 40.06] | 19.63 [19.26, 20.00] |
| Clinical | 30 | 15,216 | 195,999 | 12.88 | 10,173 | 0.67 | 30.08 [29.19, 30.97] | 12.22 [11.70, 12.74] |
| Cognitive | 10 | 7,882 | 161,614 | 20.50 | 9,343 | 1.19 | 39.49 [38.5, 40.49] | 23.59 [22.65, 24.52] |
| Developmental | 8 | 5,624 | 84,946 | 15.10 | 4,181 | 0.74 | 37.72 [36.25, 39.19 | 17.37 [16.38, 18.36] |
| Educational | 10 | 9,808 | 143,178 | 14.60 | 6,691 | 0.68 | 34.69 [33.55, 35.83] | 14.07 [13.38, 14.76] |
| Experimental | 19 | 15,387 | 334,743 | 21.75 | 18,907 | 1.23 | 40.65 [39.95, 41.35] | 24.55 [23.87, 25.23] |
| Forensic | 4 | 2,075 | 26,527 | 12.78 | 1,271 | 0.61 | 33.91 [31.31, 36.51] | 11.42 [10.05, 12.79] |
| Health | 25 | 11,054 | 138,266 | 12.51 | 6,802 | 0.62 | 31.58 [30.47, 32.68] | 11.51 [10.91, 12.10] |
| Organizational | 13 | 10,514 | 210,732 | 20.04 | 12,255 | 1.17 | 45.38 [44.5, 46.26] | 24.20 [23.38, 25.01] |
| Social | 25 | 13,746 | 266,015 | 19.35 | 15,736 | 1.14 | 44.47 [43.69, 45.25] | 25.32 [24.6, 26.05] |
Note: Values in brackets are 95% confidence intervals. APA = American Psychological Association.
This column shows the percentage of p values greater than .05 but less than or equal to .10 reported as marginally significant. bThis column shows the percentage of articles containing p values with at least one p value greater than .05 but less than or equal to .10 reported as marginally significant.
Fig. 1.Flowchart illustrating the process generating the test sample and the final data set. DOI = digital object identifier.
Comparison Between the Data of Pritschet, Powell, and Horne (2016) and the Data of the Current Article With Respect to the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and Developmental Psychology
| Article and journal | Time span | Number of articles | Number of | Number of | Number of | Number of | Marginal significance (%)[ | Marginal significance in article (%)b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current article | ||||||||
|
| 1985–2016 | 4,073 | 114,872 | 28.20 | 8,001 | 1.96 | 49.88 [48.79, 50.98] | 41.84 [40.32, 43.35] |
|
| 1985–2016 | 2,806 | 49,201 | 17.53 | 2,541 | 0.91 | 39.71 [37.81, 41.61] | 21.74 [20.21, 23.27] |
|
| ||||||||
|
| 1970–2010 | 873 | 39.52 [36.28, 42.76] | |||||
|
| 1970–2010 | 564 | 24.29 [20.75, 27.83] |
Note: Cells for numbers that could not be calculated using the data set provided by Pritschet et al. (2016) have been left blank (see osf.io/92xqk). Values in brackets are 95% confidence intervals.
This column shows the percentage of p values greater than .05 but less than or equal to .10 reported as marginally significant. bThis column shows the percentage of articles containing p values with at least one p value greater than .05 but less than or equal to .10 reported as marginally significant.
Fig. 2.Results for Developmental Psychology and the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The top row shows the percentage of p values (.05 < p ≤ .10) reported as marginally significant and percentage of articles with p values containing at least one such marginally significant p value between 1985 and 2016. The bottom row shows the number of reported p values (.05 < p ≤ .10) per article, given that the articles contained at least one p value. Slope coefficients (bs) are reported from simple linear regressions.
Fig. 3.Percentage of p values (.05 < p ≤ .10) reported as marginally significant (solid lines) and percentage of articles containing at least one such p value (dashed lines) between 1985 and 2016 in different psychology disciplines with data extracted from American Psychological Association (APA) journals. Slope coefficients (bs) are reported from simple linear regressions for each discipline and overall.