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Farid Anvari

Researcher at University of Southern Denmark

Publications -  12
Citations -  540

Farid Anvari is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ingroups and outgroups & Agency (sociology). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 324 citations. Previous affiliations of Farid Anvari include Flinders University & Eindhoven University of Technology.

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Justify your alpha

Daniel Lakens, +98 more
TL;DR: In response to recommendations to redefine statistical significance to P ≤ 0.005, it is proposed that researchers should transparently report and justify all choices they make when designing a study, including the alpha level.
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Use caution when applying behavioural science to policy.

TL;DR: In this article, a taxonomy of behavioural research on COVID-19 suitable for making policy decisions is presented. But is behavioural research suitable for policy making, and the authors caution practitioners to take extreme care translating their findings to applications.
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Using anchor-based methods to determine the smallest effect size of interest

TL;DR: In this article, the anchor-based method is used to quantify the smallest subjectively experienced difference, i.e., the smallest change in an outcome measure that individuals consider to be meaningful enough in their subjective experience such that they are willing to rate themselves as feeling different.
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The replicability crisis and public trust in psychological science

TL;DR: Replication failures of past findings in several scientific disciplines, including psychology, medicine, and experimental economics, have created a "crisis of confidence" among scientists as discussed by the authors, which has led to a "profiling crisis".
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The social psychology of whistleblowing: an integrated model

TL;DR: Whistleblowing is the disclosure of ingroup wrongdoing to an external agency and can have important functions for the regulation of moral and legal conduct as discussed by the authors, which is the most common type of information disclosure.