Abstract. Johnson, Cheung, and Donnellan (2014a) reported a failure to replicate Schnall, Benton, and Harvey (2008)’s effect of cleanliness on moral judgment. However, inspection of the replication data shows that participants provided high numbers of severe moral judgments – a ceiling effect. In the original data percentage of extreme responses per moral dilemma correlated negatively with the effect of the manipulation. In contrast, this correlation was absent in the replications, due to almost all items showing a high percentage of extreme responses. Therefore the parametric statistics reported by Johnson et al. (2014a) are inconclusive regarding the reproducibility of the original effect. Direct replications are prone to error when revie...
The self-correcting nature of psychological and educational science has been seriously questioned. R...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...
Scientists are dedicating more attention to replication efforts. While the scientific utility of rep...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
Abstract. Schnall, Benton, and Harvey (2008) hypothesized that physical cleanliness reduces the seve...
<p>Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals of the effect size (Cohen’s d units, maximum CI widt...
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/2515245918769062Accepted manuscriptPublished versio
Replication studies that contradict prior findings may facilitate scientific self-correction by tri...
This archive contains the data original posted by White et al. here: http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/2...
Problems of replicability of probabilistic findings have been discussed since Ioannidis. In psycholo...
In recent years, the field of psychology has begun to conduct replication tests on a large scale. He...
Zhong and Liljenquist (2006) reported evidence of a “Macbeth Effect” in social psychology: a threat ...
Replication studies that contradict prior findings may facilitate scientific self-correction by trig...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
The self-correcting nature of psychological and educational science has been seriously questioned. R...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...
Scientists are dedicating more attention to replication efforts. While the scientific utility of rep...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
Abstract. Schnall, Benton, and Harvey (2008) hypothesized that physical cleanliness reduces the seve...
<p>Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals of the effect size (Cohen’s d units, maximum CI widt...
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/2515245918769062Accepted manuscriptPublished versio
Replication studies that contradict prior findings may facilitate scientific self-correction by tri...
This archive contains the data original posted by White et al. here: http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/2...
Problems of replicability of probabilistic findings have been discussed since Ioannidis. In psycholo...
In recent years, the field of psychology has begun to conduct replication tests on a large scale. He...
Zhong and Liljenquist (2006) reported evidence of a “Macbeth Effect” in social psychology: a threat ...
Replication studies that contradict prior findings may facilitate scientific self-correction by trig...
We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laborat...
The self-correcting nature of psychological and educational science has been seriously questioned. R...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...
Scientists are dedicating more attention to replication efforts. While the scientific utility of rep...