In this paper, we show how Bayes' theorem can be used to better understand the implications of the 36% reproducibility rate of published psychological findings reported by the Open Science Collaboration. We demonstrate a method to assess publication bias and show that the observed reproducibility rate was not consistent with an unbiased literature. We estimate a plausible range for the prior probability of this body of research, suggesting expected statistical power in the original studies of 48–75%, producing (positive) findings that were expected to be true 41–62% of the time. Publication bias was large, assuming a literature with 90% positive findings, indicating that negative evidence was expected to have been observed 55–98 times befor...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
In this paper, we show how Bayes' theorem can be used to better understand the implications of the 3...
<p>This paper has been published in<i> Royal Society Open Science</i>: </p><p><br></p><p>http://rsos...
We revisit the results of the recent Reproducibility Project: Psychology by the Open Science Collabo...
We revisit the results of the recent Reproducibility Project: Psychology by the Open Science Collabo...
The field of psychology has entered a period of reform in which formative results are being doubted ...
Contains fulltext : 155639.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Reproducibili...
<div><p>The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
In this paper, we show how Bayes' theorem can be used to better understand the implications of the 3...
<p>This paper has been published in<i> Royal Society Open Science</i>: </p><p><br></p><p>http://rsos...
We revisit the results of the recent Reproducibility Project: Psychology by the Open Science Collabo...
We revisit the results of the recent Reproducibility Project: Psychology by the Open Science Collabo...
The field of psychology has entered a period of reform in which formative results are being doubted ...
Contains fulltext : 155639.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Reproducibili...
<div><p>The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
The vast majority of published results in the literature is statistically significant, which raises ...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...
This record contains the underlying research data for the publication "Estimating the reproducibilit...