International audienceResponse distributions in social psychology papers are usually summarized by means and standard deviations (in absence of raw data), even when they are not necessarily continuous, unbounded nor unimodal (e.g., scores on a small set of Likert-like items). Applying statistical methods assuming normality (e.g., of prediction errors for the general linear model) may lead to inflated type I error rates and broadly to incorrect inferences drawn from the data. This particularly applies to social cognition when studying biases that may heavily distort the distributions (e.g., social desirability or utility response bias).Given the need to confirm that summary statistics are correct (to prevent errors or fraud) and representati...
Statistical hypothesis testing is an integral part of the scientific process. When employed to make ...
Hierarchically-organized data arise naturally in many psychology and neuroscience studies. As the st...
The authors discuss the problem with failing to sample stimuli in social psychological experimentati...
International audienceResponse distributions in social psychology papers are usually summarized by m...
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical resul...
Random sample surveys have become one of the key research tools in quantitative social science. Some...
This dissertation is composed of projects on three aspects of gathering and learning from data in th...
Social sciences offer particular challenges to statistics due to difficulties such as conducting ran...
Social scientists often estimate models from correlational data, where the independent variable has ...
Statistical inference often fails to replicate. One reason is that many results may be selected for ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
Bayesian simulation is increasingly exploited in the social sciences for estimation and inference of...
In many areas of research, the precise measurement of hypothesized processes or variables (theoretic...
We applied three Bayesian methods to reanalyse the preregistered contributions to the Social Psychol...
Social science commonly studies relationships among variables by employing survey questions. Answers...
Statistical hypothesis testing is an integral part of the scientific process. When employed to make ...
Hierarchically-organized data arise naturally in many psychology and neuroscience studies. As the st...
The authors discuss the problem with failing to sample stimuli in social psychological experimentati...
International audienceResponse distributions in social psychology papers are usually summarized by m...
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical resul...
Random sample surveys have become one of the key research tools in quantitative social science. Some...
This dissertation is composed of projects on three aspects of gathering and learning from data in th...
Social sciences offer particular challenges to statistics due to difficulties such as conducting ran...
Social scientists often estimate models from correlational data, where the independent variable has ...
Statistical inference often fails to replicate. One reason is that many results may be selected for ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
Bayesian simulation is increasingly exploited in the social sciences for estimation and inference of...
In many areas of research, the precise measurement of hypothesized processes or variables (theoretic...
We applied three Bayesian methods to reanalyse the preregistered contributions to the Social Psychol...
Social science commonly studies relationships among variables by employing survey questions. Answers...
Statistical hypothesis testing is an integral part of the scientific process. When employed to make ...
Hierarchically-organized data arise naturally in many psychology and neuroscience studies. As the st...
The authors discuss the problem with failing to sample stimuli in social psychological experimentati...