A 2011 Cochrane Review found that adequately randomized trials sometimes revealed larger, sometimes smaller, and often similar effect sizes to inadequately randomized trials. However, they found no average statistically significant difference in effect sizes between the two study types. Yet instead of concluding that adequate randomization had no effect the review authors postulated the “unpredictability paradox”, which states that randomized and non-randomized studies differ, but in an unpredictable direction. However, stipulating the unpredictability paradox is problematic for several reasons: 1) it makes the authors’ conclusion that adequate randomization makes a difference unfalsifiable—if it turned out that adequately randomized trials...
Thesis by publication.Bibliography: pages 161-169.1. Introduction -- 2. Meta-analysis of clinical tr...
Established frameworks to understand problems with reproducibility in science begin with the relatio...
Causation can be inferred by two distinct patterns of reasoning, each requiring a distinct experi-me...
According to R.A. Fisher, randomization “relieves the experimenter from the anxiety of con-sidering ...
While practitioners think highly of randomized studies, some philosophers argue that there is no ep...
According to R.A. Fisher, randomization "relieves the experimenter from the anxiety of considering i...
Evidence of unexplained discrepancies between planned and conducted statistical analyses: a review o...
Flaws in the design of randomized trials may bias intervention effect estimates and increase between...
Flaws in the design of randomized trials may bias intervention effect estimates and increase between...
The concept of randomness has been unjustly neglected in recent philosophical literature, and when p...
Randomization is a key ingredient of rigorous causal inference. Given the increasing desire for rigo...
This thesis examines philosophical controversies surrounding the evaluation of medical treatments, w...
BACKGROUND: Choosing or altering the planned statistical analysis approach after examination of tria...
Abstract One area of biomedical research where the replication crisis is most visible and consequent...
Background: This paper addresses one threat to the internal validity of a randomized controlled ...
Thesis by publication.Bibliography: pages 161-169.1. Introduction -- 2. Meta-analysis of clinical tr...
Established frameworks to understand problems with reproducibility in science begin with the relatio...
Causation can be inferred by two distinct patterns of reasoning, each requiring a distinct experi-me...
According to R.A. Fisher, randomization “relieves the experimenter from the anxiety of con-sidering ...
While practitioners think highly of randomized studies, some philosophers argue that there is no ep...
According to R.A. Fisher, randomization "relieves the experimenter from the anxiety of considering i...
Evidence of unexplained discrepancies between planned and conducted statistical analyses: a review o...
Flaws in the design of randomized trials may bias intervention effect estimates and increase between...
Flaws in the design of randomized trials may bias intervention effect estimates and increase between...
The concept of randomness has been unjustly neglected in recent philosophical literature, and when p...
Randomization is a key ingredient of rigorous causal inference. Given the increasing desire for rigo...
This thesis examines philosophical controversies surrounding the evaluation of medical treatments, w...
BACKGROUND: Choosing or altering the planned statistical analysis approach after examination of tria...
Abstract One area of biomedical research where the replication crisis is most visible and consequent...
Background: This paper addresses one threat to the internal validity of a randomized controlled ...
Thesis by publication.Bibliography: pages 161-169.1. Introduction -- 2. Meta-analysis of clinical tr...
Established frameworks to understand problems with reproducibility in science begin with the relatio...
Causation can be inferred by two distinct patterns of reasoning, each requiring a distinct experi-me...