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False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant

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TLDR
It is shown that despite empirical psychologists’ nominal endorsement of a low rate of false-positive findings, flexibility in data collection, analysis, and reporting dramatically increases actual false- positive rates, and a simple, low-cost, and straightforwardly effective disclosure-based solution is suggested.
Abstract
In this article, we accomplish two things. First, we show that despite empirical psychologists' nominal endorsement of a low rate of false-positive findings (≤ .05), flexibility in data collection, analysis, and reporting dramatically increases actual false-positive rates. In many cases, a researcher is more likely to falsely find evidence that an effect exists than to correctly find evidence that it does not. We present computer simulations and a pair of actual experiments that demonstrate how unacceptably easy it is to accumulate (and report) statistically significant evidence for a false hypothesis. Second, we suggest a simple, low-cost, and straightforwardly effective disclosure-based solution to this problem. The solution involves six concrete requirements for authors and four guidelines for reviewers, all of which impose a minimal burden on the publication process.

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Predicting replication outcomes in the Many Labs 2 study

TL;DR: This article elicited peer beliefs in prediction markets and surveys about two replication success metrics: the probability that the replication yields a statistically significant effect in the original direction (p p ) and the probability of the replication success metric.
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Human estrus: implications for relationship science

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that women's sexual desires change across the cycle, as do men's responses to women, and that women engage in sexual activity throughout the ovulatory cycle.
Posted Content

Max-Information, Differential Privacy, and Post-Selection Hypothesis Testing

TL;DR: In this article, the generalization properties of approximate differential privacy can be used to perform adaptive hypothesis testing, while giving statistically valid $p$-value corrections, and it is shown that the guarantees of algorithms with bounded approximate max-information are sufficient to correct the values of adaptively chosen hypotheses.
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Judgment Extremity and Accuracy Under Epistemic vs. Aleatory Uncertainty

TL;DR: It is shown that people make more extreme probability judgments for events they view as entailing more epistemic uncertainty and less aleatory uncertainty, in a domain where there is agreement concerning the balance of evidence but individual differences in the perception of the epistemicness/aleatoriness of that domain.
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From the general to the specific: How social trust motivates relational trust.

TL;DR: The results support the idea that people rely on schemas and stereotypes concerned with the general cooperativeness and helpfulness of others when forming beliefs about another person's trustworthiness with respect to a particular matter at hand.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The case for motivated reasoning.

TL;DR: It is proposed that motivation may affect reasoning through reliance on a biased set of cognitive processes--that is, strategies for accessing, constructing, and evaluating beliefs--that are considered most likely to yield the desired conclusion.

Why Most Published Research Findings Are False

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the implications of these problems for the conduct and interpretation of research and suggest that claimed research findings may often be simply accurate measures of the prevailing bias.
Journal ArticleDOI

Group sequential methods in the design and analysis of clinical trials

TL;DR: In this article, a group sequential design is proposed to divide patient entry into a number of equal-sized groups so that the decision to stop the trial or continue is based on repeated significance tests of the accumulated data after each group is evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the Prevalence of Questionable Research Practices With Incentives for Truth Telling

TL;DR: It is found that the percentage of respondents who have engaged in questionable practices was surprisingly high, which suggests that some questionable practices may constitute the prevailing research norm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attribution of success and failure revisited, or: The motivational bias is alive and well in attribution theory

TL;DR: The authors found that self-serving effects for both success and failure are obtained in most but not all experimental paradigms, and that these attributions are better understood in motivational than in information-processing terms.
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