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Jason M. Prenoveau

Researcher at Loyola University Maryland

Publications -  36
Citations -  7402

Jason M. Prenoveau is an academic researcher from Loyola University Maryland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Fear conditioning. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 34 publications receiving 5986 citations. Previous affiliations of Jason M. Prenoveau include University of California, Los Angeles & Loyola University Chicago.

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Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science

Alexander A. Aarts, +290 more
- 28 Aug 2015 - 
TL;DR: A large-scale assessment suggests that experimental reproducibility in psychology leaves a lot to be desired, and correlational tests suggest that replication success was better predicted by the strength of original evidence than by characteristics of the original and replication teams.
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What is an anxiety disorder

TL;DR: The extant data help to define the features of responding that are shared across anxiety disorders, but are insufficient to justify revisions to the DSM nosology at this time.
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Many analysts, one dataset: Making transparent how variations in analytical choices affect results

Raphael Silberzahn, +65 more
TL;DR: In this paper, 29 teams involving 61 analysts used the same data set to address the same research question: whether soccer referees are more likely to give red cards to dark-skin-toned players than to light-skinned-players.
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Response to comment on "Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science"

Christopher J. Anderson, +47 more
- 04 Mar 2016 - 
TL;DR: Evidence from the Open Science Collaboration’s Reproducibility Project: Psychology indicates high reproducibility, given the study methodology, and both optimistic and pessimistic conclusions are possible, and neither are yet warranted.
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What Is an Anxiety Disorder

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated whether the anxiety disorders share features of responding that define them and make them distinct from depressive disorders, and/or differentiate fear disorders from anxious-misery disorders.