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Journal ArticleDOI

Replication and Economics Journal Policies

Jan H. Höffler
- 01 May 2017 - 
- Vol. 107, Iss: 5, pp 52-55
TLDR
For example, the American Journal of Political Science sets an example by having all empirical studies externally check for replicability prior to publication as discussed by the authors, which is a mandatory and enforced policy.
Abstract
Economics journals with reproducibility policies are cited more often than others. For the minority of journals with a mandatory and enforced policy, this is significant when controlling for time and journal effects. To cope with the large variety of software used and to develop standards for replicability, joint efforts of journals could ensure each empirical study is published with data, code, and instructions on how to use them together. Individual reviewers could take initiative by asking for replicable empirical results. The American Journal of Political Science sets an example by having all empirical studies externally check for replicability prior to publication.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Replication Studies in Economics: How Many and Which Papers Are Chosen for Replication, and Why?

TL;DR: The authors investigate how often replication studies are published in empirical economics and what types of journal articles are replicated, and find evidence that higher-impact articles and articles by authors from leading institutions are more likely to be replicated, whereas the replication probability is lower for articles that appeared in top 5 economics journals.
Posted Content

Evidence-based policymaking: Promise, challenges and opportunities for accounting and financial markets research

TL;DR: The use of evidence and economic analysis in policymaking is on the rise, and accounting standard setting and financial regulation are no exception as mentioned in this paper, and the promise of evidence-based policymaking in accounting and financial markets as well as the challenges and opportunities for research supporting this endeavor is discussed.
ReportDOI

Evidence-Based Policymaking: Promise, Challenges and Opportunities for Accounting and Financial Markets Research

TL;DR: The use of evidence and economic analysis in policymaking is on the rise, and accounting standard setting and financial regulation are no exception as mentioned in this paper, and the promise of evidence-based policy making is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Dozen Things Experimental Economists Should Do (More of)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors take a step back from the burgeoning experimental literature and introduce 12 actions that might help to alleviate this credibility crisis and raise experimental economics to an even higher level.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Proposal to Organize and Promote Replications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a two-pronged proposal to strengthen the incentives for replication work and better organize and draw attention to the replications that are conducted, and they suggest incentivizing replications with the currency of our profession: citations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sharing Detailed Research Data Is Associated with Increased Citation Rate

TL;DR: This correlation between publicly available data and increased literature impact may further motivate investigators to share their detailed research data.
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The Rich Domain of Uncertainty: Source Functions and Their Experimental Implementation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the source method, a tractable method for quantitatively analyzing uncertainty empirically, within which subjective (choice-based) probabilities can still be defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Data reuse and the open data citation advantage

TL;DR: There is a direct effect of third-party data reuse that persists for years beyond the time when researchers have published most of the papers reusing their own data, and a robust citation benefit from open data is found, although a smaller one than previously reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Future of Replication

Journal ArticleDOI

Symposium on Replication in International Studies Research

TL;DR: Boyer et al. as discussed by the authors presented a set of papers at the 2002 International Studies Association meetings in New Orleans, examining issues concerning the potential replication of research results from a number of different conceptual and technical perspectives.
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