In this article, we argue that the debate on the poor reproducibility of scientific research has overlooked an entire field: replication is also possible and desirable in the humanities. So far, the debate on replicability has been carried out primarily in the biomedical, natural and social sciences. It turns out that, for a wide variety of reasons, many of which lead to selective reporting, a large proportion of studies in these fields are not replicable, sometimes as many as 70 percent. In this paper, we leave these fields mostly aside, since they have been extensively addressed in the recent literature, and turn to the humanities. First, we distinguish between replicability and replication. Subsequently, we defend the view that replicati...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Replication is one of the main principles of the scientific method. The social sciences, and in part...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...
Abstract A large number of scientists and several news platforms have, over the last few years, been...
Argues that the humanities do not need a replication drive like that being pushed for in the science...
Responding to the so-called reproducibility crisis, various disciplines have proposed - and some hav...
The increasing pursuit of replicable research and actual replication of research is a political proj...
The increasing pursuit of replicable research and actual replication of research is a political proj...
The idea of this paper arose in a reading group of several colleagues at the Faculty of Philology of...
We re-examine the so-called “replication problem” in sociology—a scarcity of published studies dedic...
The "replication crisis" that has been raging in fields like Psychology (Open Science Collaboration ...
The replicability of a research claim is often positioned as an important step in establishing the c...
Replicability is usually considered to be one of the cornerstones of science; however, the growing r...
The replication of existing knowledge (e.g. previous study results) stands as an important research ...
At various machine learning conferences, at various times, there have been discussions arising from ...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Replication is one of the main principles of the scientific method. The social sciences, and in part...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...
Abstract A large number of scientists and several news platforms have, over the last few years, been...
Argues that the humanities do not need a replication drive like that being pushed for in the science...
Responding to the so-called reproducibility crisis, various disciplines have proposed - and some hav...
The increasing pursuit of replicable research and actual replication of research is a political proj...
The increasing pursuit of replicable research and actual replication of research is a political proj...
The idea of this paper arose in a reading group of several colleagues at the Faculty of Philology of...
We re-examine the so-called “replication problem” in sociology—a scarcity of published studies dedic...
The "replication crisis" that has been raging in fields like Psychology (Open Science Collaboration ...
The replicability of a research claim is often positioned as an important step in establishing the c...
Replicability is usually considered to be one of the cornerstones of science; however, the growing r...
The replication of existing knowledge (e.g. previous study results) stands as an important research ...
At various machine learning conferences, at various times, there have been discussions arising from ...
The replicability crisis refers to the apparent failures to replicate both important and typical pos...
Replication is one of the main principles of the scientific method. The social sciences, and in part...
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fiel...