Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Science has been in a “replication crisis” for a decade. Have we learned anything?

#1
C C Offline
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/21504...statistics

INTRO: Much ink has been spilled over the “replication crisis” in the last decade and a half, including here at Vox. Researchers have discovered, over and over, that lots of findings in fields like psychology, sociology, medicine, and economics don’t hold up when other researchers try to replicate them.

This conversation was fueled in part by John Ioannidis’s 2005 article “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False” and by the controversy around a 2011 paper that used then-standard statistical methods to find that people have precognition. But since then, many researchers have explored the replication crisis from different angles. Why are research findings so often unreliable? Is the problem just that we test for “statistical significance” — the likelihood that similarly strong results could have occurred by chance — in a nuance-free way? Is it that null results (that is, when a study finds no detectable effects) are ignored while positive ones make it into journals?

A recent write-up by Alvaro de Menard, a participant in the Defense Advanced Research Project’s Agency’s (DARPA) replication markets project (more on this below), makes the case for a more depressing view: The processes that lead to unreliable research findings are routine, well understood, predictable, and in principle pretty easy to avoid. And yet, he argues, we’re still not improving the quality and rigor of social science research.

While other researchers I spoke with pushed back on parts of Menard’s pessimistic take, they do agree on something: a decade of talking about the replication crisis hasn’t translated into a scientific process that’s much less vulnerable to it. Bad science is still frequently published, including in top journals — and that needs to change... (MORE)
Reply
#2
Syne Offline
The social sciences, in particular, are rife with bias. It's like how most psych students seem to get into the subject to cure their own mental ills. IOW, the impetus for entering those fields is motivated reasoning...from the get go. No surprise motivated reasoning persists.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Article Credibility crisis in science + How logic & reasoning can fail as scientific tools C C 0 59 Mar 22, 2024 04:18 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article What’s wrong with peer review? + No, TCM has not been vindicated by science C C 1 83 Nov 13, 2023 03:09 PM
Last Post: Zinjanthropos
  Is psychology good for anything? + Public is OK, it's scientists who are the problem C C 0 68 Oct 5, 2023 05:15 AM
Last Post: C C
  Debunked: “learned helplessness,” a theory developed from a cruel animal experiment C C 0 163 Mar 25, 2022 05:47 PM
Last Post: C C
  How I learned to love pseudoscience C C 2 127 Oct 11, 2021 09:43 PM
Last Post: Syne
  Failures of replication in psychology C C 0 87 Jun 30, 2021 04:43 PM
Last Post: C C
  Why Dunbar's number has not been debunked? C C 0 133 May 13, 2021 03:59 PM
Last Post: C C
  Psychology is in a replication crisis. The PSA is trying to fix it. C C 1 122 Apr 9, 2021 07:01 AM
Last Post: Syne
  ‘Woke’ science has no place in government policymaking + Science goes rogue C C 0 131 Mar 16, 2021 02:50 AM
Last Post: C C
  Does the COVID-19 cytokine storm really exist? Has it been debunked? C C 1 178 Sep 5, 2020 08:59 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)