WSRt, critical thinking - a summary of all articles needed in the second block of second year psychology at the uva
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Critical thinking
Article: Nosek, Spies, & Motyl, (2012)
Scientific Utopia: II. Restructuring Incentives and Practices to Promote Truth Over Publishability
An academic scientist’s professional success depends on publishing.
This article develops strategies for improving scientific practices and knowledge accumulation that account for ordinary human motivations and biases.
Incentives for surprising, innovative results are strong in science.
Problem: the incentives for publishable results can be at odds with the incentives for accurate results. This produces a conflict of interest.
The solution requires making incentives for getting it right competitive with the incentives for getting it published.
Publishing is the ‘very heart of modern academic science, at levels ranging from the epistemic certification of scientific thought to the more personal labyrinths of job security, quality of life and self esteem’.
With an intensely competitive job marked, the demands on publication might seem to suggest a specific objective for the early-career scientists: publish as many articles as possible in the most prestigious journals that will accept them.
Even if a researcher conducts studies competently, analyses the data effectively, and writes the results beautifully, there is not guarantee that the report will be published.
Part of the process is outside the researcher’s control.
High demand for limited space means that authors must strive to meet all publishing criteria so that an editor will do the unusual act of accepting the manuscript.
On its own, the fact that publishing is essential to success is just a fact of the trade.
But, publishing is also the basis of a conflict of interest between personal interests and the objective of knowledge accumulation.
The present authors have
Because we have directional goals for success, we are likely to bring to bear motivated reasoning to justify research decisions in the name of accuracy, when they are actually in service of career advancement.
Motivated reasoning is particularly influential when the situation is complex, the available information is ambiguous, and legitimate reasons can be generated for multiple courses of action.
Even if we resits the reasoning biases in the moment, after a few months, we forget the details.
Forgetting the details proves an opportunity for re-imagining the study purpose and results to recall and understand them in their best light.
Direct replication of another’s study procedures to confirm the results is uncommon in the social sciences.
Publishing a result does not make it true.
Many published results have uncertain truth value.
Replication is a means of increasing the confidence in the truth value of a claim.
The dominant model of null hypotheses significance testing has become a de facto criterion for publishing.
Psychologists perceive a bias against negative (null) results and are less likely to continue perusing or report negative results. Journals are less likely to publish negative as compared to positive results.
The demands for novelty and positive results create incentives for:
Other contributors have detailed a variety of practices that can increase publish-ability but might simultaneously decrease validity
Practices that are justifiable sometimes but can also increase the proportion of published false results:
The lack of interest in replication is striking given its centrality to science.
Other scientists must be able to independently replicate and verify, or dis-confirm the original scientist’s results.
In principle, open haring of methodology means that the entire body of scientific knowledge can be reproduced by anyone.
But they are seldom published because they are not novel enough.
The consequences of the publish-ability-improving practices can be severe.
False effects interfere with knowledge accumulation.
These innovation are not sufficient to address the proliferation of false effects
Conceptual replication
Whereas a direct replication is able to produce facts, a conceptual replication may produce understanding.
As such, using conceptual replication as a replacement for direct replication is the scientific embodiment of confirmation bias.
The mythology of science as self-correcting
False effects can remain for decades, slowly fading or continuing to inspire and influence new research.
Even when it becomes known that an effect is false, retraction of the original result is very rare.
Researchers who do not discover the corrective knowledge may continue to be influenced by the original, false result.
The truth will win eventually, but we are not content to wait.
Journals devoted to publishing replications or negative results
Defining a journal based on negative results or replications is self-defining it as a low importance outlet.
Education campaigns emphasizing the importance of replication and reporting negative results
It has not worked yet.
Publishing practices are hard to change because innovative research is more important than replication and negative results.
Innovation is the key driver of scientific progress.
Increasing expectations of reviewers to catch motivated reasoning and other signs of false results
Rejected because:
Raising the barrier for publication
The standards for publication are already extremely high, especially in the social and behavioural sciences.
Requiring replication of everything could stifle risk taking and innovation.
The key for improving the efficiency of knowledge accumulation is to capitalize on existing motivation the be accurate and to reduce the emphasis on publication itself as the mechanism of achievement and advancement.
Promoting and rewarding paradigm-driven research
Paradigm-driven research can be used for both confirming and disconfirming prior results.
This offers an opportunity to incorporate replication and extension into a single experimental design.
Effective use of this approach requires development of standards, sharing and reuse of materials, and deliberate alteration of design rather than wholesale reinvention.
It is easy to do more paradigm-driven research if authors make their paradigms available to others.
Primary risk: research questions can evolve to being about the method itself rather than the theory that the method is intended to address.
Author, reviewer, and editor checklists
Checklists are an effective means of improving the likelihood that particular behaviours are performed and performed accurately.
Checklists can ensure disclosures of obvious items that are sometimes forgotten.
They can also define best practices and methodological standards for domain-specific applications.
Why checklists?
Challenging mindsets that sustain the dysfunctional incentives
Metrics to identify what is worth replicating
Even if valuation of replication increased it is not feasible, or advisable, to replicate everything.
Solution: metrics for identifying replication value, what effects are more worthwhile to replicate than others.
Crowd sourcing replication efforts
Individual scientists and laboratories may be interested in conducting replications but do not have sufficient resources available for them.
It may be easier to conduct replications by crowd sourcing them with multiple contributors.
Some important findings are difficult to replicate because of resource constrains.
Feasibility could be enhanced by spreading the data collection effort across multiple laboratories.
Journals with peer review standards focused on the soundness, not importance, of research
The basis of rejection for much research is that it does not meet the criterion of being sufficient ‘important’ for the journal considering it. Even if the research is sound and reported effectively.
With a publishing model focused on soundness, negative results and replications are more publishable, and the journal identity is not defined as publishing research that is otherwise unpublishable.
Lowering or removing the barrier for publication
To discard publishing as a meaningful incentive.
Make it trivial to publish.
Postpublication peer review can separate gatekeeper and evaluator.
The priorities in the peer review process would shift from assessing whether the manuscript should be published to whether the ideas should be taken seriously and how they can be improved.
This would remove a major barrier to publishing replications and negative results if and when they occur.
This change would alter the mindset that publication is the end of the research process.
Openness provides scientists with confidence in the claims and evidence provided by other scientists.
Open data
With the massive growth in data and increased ease of making it available, calls for open data as a standard practice are occurring across all of the sciences.
Errors can occur in data coding, data cleaning, data analysis and result reporting. None of those can be detected with only the summary report.
Making data openly available increases the likelihood of finding and correcting errors and ultimately improving reported results.
Open methods and tools
Open methods facilitate confirmation, extension, critique, improvement, adaptation.
Facilitates replication and paradigm-driven research.
Open workflow
Public documentation of a laboratory’s research process makes bad practices easier to detect and could reduce the likelihood that they occur at all.
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This is a summary of the articles and reading materials that are needed for the second block in the course WSR-t. This course is given to second year psychology students at the Uva. This block is about analysing and evaluating psychological research. The order in which the
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