Over its brief history, the discipline of psychology has seen its fair share of crises (Farr, 1991). In the grand scheme of academic scholarship, it has sandwiched itself between the natural and the social sciences. This positioning, in itself, has fuelled fierce as well as productive debates concerning the discipline’s scope, its phenomenology, epistemology, and methodology (see Toomela & Valsiner, 2010). The latest crisis to afflict the discipline is the infamous ‘replication crisis’, precipitated by the Reproducibility Project which claimed that it was only able to find evidence for successful replication of published psychological findings in 47% of cases (i.e. less than chance, or 50%).peer-reviewe
More than 40 years ago, Paul Meehl (1978) published a seminal critique of the state of theorizing in...
There has been increasing criticism of the way psychologists conduct and analyze studies. These crit...
The replication crisis facing the psychological sciences is widely regarded as rooted in methodologi...
The “replication crisis” may well be the single most important challenge facing empirical psychologi...
This article outlines what we call the “narrative of psychology exceptionalism” in commentaries on t...
This article explores in-depth the metatheoretical and methodological foundations on which rating sc...
This article explores in-depth the metatheoretical and methodological foundations on which rating sc...
This chapter considers various factors that have been responsible for the comparatively slow develop...
Over the last few years, psychology researchers have become increasingly preoccupied with the questi...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
Although the discipline of psychology, in its contemporary form, is only a century old, psychology\u...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
In recent debates about the replication crisis, two positions have been dominant: One that focuses o...
<p>The conjecture defended in this essay is that the crisis of confidence in the empirical record of...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
More than 40 years ago, Paul Meehl (1978) published a seminal critique of the state of theorizing in...
There has been increasing criticism of the way psychologists conduct and analyze studies. These crit...
The replication crisis facing the psychological sciences is widely regarded as rooted in methodologi...
The “replication crisis” may well be the single most important challenge facing empirical psychologi...
This article outlines what we call the “narrative of psychology exceptionalism” in commentaries on t...
This article explores in-depth the metatheoretical and methodological foundations on which rating sc...
This article explores in-depth the metatheoretical and methodological foundations on which rating sc...
This chapter considers various factors that have been responsible for the comparatively slow develop...
Over the last few years, psychology researchers have become increasingly preoccupied with the questi...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
Although the discipline of psychology, in its contemporary form, is only a century old, psychology\u...
Meehl argued in 1978 that theories in psychology come and go, with little cumulative progress. We be...
In recent debates about the replication crisis, two positions have been dominant: One that focuses o...
<p>The conjecture defended in this essay is that the crisis of confidence in the empirical record of...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
More than 40 years ago, Paul Meehl (1978) published a seminal critique of the state of theorizing in...
There has been increasing criticism of the way psychologists conduct and analyze studies. These crit...
The replication crisis facing the psychological sciences is widely regarded as rooted in methodologi...