Replication1 is seen as a key characteristic of natural science (Collins, 1985; Jasny et al., 2011); observations, especially those employing complex instruments, and experiments need to be repeated, and statistical analyses be scrutinized, before results gain credibility. This is not the case in social sciences; social science data are seldom re-produced,2 or re-analysed to check the original calculations, or analysed using alternative perspectives or frameworks.3 Hence, it is not clear that quantitative social science can advance in the same way as natural science. Nevertheless, there have often been calls among quantitative social scientists for replication (Frisch, 1933; Dewald et al., 1986; King, 1995; Gleditsch and Metelits, 2003; McC...
The self-correcting nature of science has been questioned repeatedly in the decade since Ioan-nidis ...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical resul...
Replication1 is seen as a key characteristic of natural science (Collins, 1985; Jasny et al., 2011);...
Being able to replicate scientific findings is crucial for scientific progress. We replicate 21 syst...
Researchers have obligations to produce and disseminate high quality, rigorous, robust, and respectf...
Do scientific claims, based on systematic observations, mean they are compulsorily true? Some empiri...
In 2015, Open Science Framework directly replicated 100 psychology studies and found astonishingly l...
Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise. In the past 30 years, recurring concerns ...
Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise. In the past 30 years, recurring concerns ...
The idea of this paper arose in a reading group of several colleagues at the Faculty of Philology of...
Several hundred research groups attempted replications of published effects in so-called Many Labs s...
We measure how accurately replication of experimental results can be predicted by black-box statisti...
Problems of replicability of probabilistic findings have been discussed since Ioannidis. In psycholo...
Replications and robustness checks are key elements of the scientific method and a staple in many di...
The self-correcting nature of science has been questioned repeatedly in the decade since Ioan-nidis ...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical resul...
Replication1 is seen as a key characteristic of natural science (Collins, 1985; Jasny et al., 2011);...
Being able to replicate scientific findings is crucial for scientific progress. We replicate 21 syst...
Researchers have obligations to produce and disseminate high quality, rigorous, robust, and respectf...
Do scientific claims, based on systematic observations, mean they are compulsorily true? Some empiri...
In 2015, Open Science Framework directly replicated 100 psychology studies and found astonishingly l...
Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise. In the past 30 years, recurring concerns ...
Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise. In the past 30 years, recurring concerns ...
The idea of this paper arose in a reading group of several colleagues at the Faculty of Philology of...
Several hundred research groups attempted replications of published effects in so-called Many Labs s...
We measure how accurately replication of experimental results can be predicted by black-box statisti...
Problems of replicability of probabilistic findings have been discussed since Ioannidis. In psycholo...
Replications and robustness checks are key elements of the scientific method and a staple in many di...
The self-correcting nature of science has been questioned repeatedly in the decade since Ioan-nidis ...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical resul...