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Christina M. Tworek

Researcher at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

Publications -  7
Citations -  482

Christina M. Tworek is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Empirical research & Replication (statistics). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 383 citations. Previous affiliations of Christina M. Tworek include New York University.

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Cultural transmission of social essentialism

TL;DR: Testing the hypothesis that generic language facilitates the cultural transmission of social essentialism found that hearing generic language about a novel social category diverse for race, ethnicity, age, and sex led 4-y-olds and adults to develop essentialist beliefs about that social category.
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Crowdsourcing hypothesis tests: Making transparent how design choices shape research results

Justin F. Landy, +48 more
TL;DR: Crowdsourced testing of research hypotheses helps reveal the true consistency of empirical support for a scientific claim.
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The pipeline project : Pre-publication independent replications of a single laboratory's research pipeline

Martin Schweinsberg, +82 more
TL;DR: The Pre-Publication Independent Replication (PPIR) project as discussed by the authors is a collaborative approach to improving the reproducibility of scientific research, in which findings are replicated in qualified independent laboratories before (rather than after) they are published.
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Why Do People Tend to Infer “Ought” From “Is”? The Role of Biases in Explanation:

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the tendency to reason from “is” to “ought” is due in part to a systematic bias in people’s (nonmoral) explanations, whereby regularities are explained predominantly via inherent or intrinsic facts.
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Data from a pre-publication independent replication initiative examining ten moral judgement effects

Warren Tierney, +84 more
- 11 Oct 2016 - 
TL;DR: In the Pre-Publication Independent Replication (PPIR) project as discussed by the authors, 25 research groups attempted to replicate 10 moral judgment effects from a single laboratory's research pipeline of unpublished findings using online/lab surveys containing psychological manipulations.