The self-correcting nature of psychological and educational science has been seriously questioned. Recent special issues of Perspectives on Psychological Science and Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts have roundly condemned current organizational models of research and dissemination and have criticized the perverse incentive structure that tempts researchers into generating and publishing false positive findings. At the same time, replications are rarely attempted, allowing untruths to persist in the literature unchallenged. In this article, the editors of the Journal of Advanced Academics consider this situation and announce new policies for quantitative submissions. They are (a) an explicit call for replication studies; (b...
Replications and robustness checks are key elements of the scientific method and a staple in many di...
Although replications are vital to scientific progress, psychologists rarely engage in systematic re...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
The Quantitative Methods for Psychology journal begins the publication of replication stu...
The editors of the Journal of Advanced Academics comment on Makel (2014). The replicability crisis i...
Research transparency is becoming increasingly important across the social and medical sciences and ...
Although replications are vital to scientific progress, psychologists rarely engage in systematic re...
Recent research in psychology has highlighted a number of replication problems in the discipline, wi...
Restoring confidence in psychological science findings: A call for direct replication studies Denis ...
We agree with the authors' arguments to make replication mainstream but contend that the poor replic...
Recent research in psychology has highlighted a number of replication problems in the di...
Current efforts started in 2012 by the Association for Psychological Science (APS) appear to be diff...
Social psychology and related disciplines are seeing a resurgence of interest in replication, as wel...
The last ten years have witnessed increasing awareness of questionable research practices (QRPs) in ...
Reproducibility is a defining feature of science, but the extent to which it characterizes current r...
Replications and robustness checks are key elements of the scientific method and a staple in many di...
Although replications are vital to scientific progress, psychologists rarely engage in systematic re...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
The Quantitative Methods for Psychology journal begins the publication of replication stu...
The editors of the Journal of Advanced Academics comment on Makel (2014). The replicability crisis i...
Research transparency is becoming increasingly important across the social and medical sciences and ...
Although replications are vital to scientific progress, psychologists rarely engage in systematic re...
Recent research in psychology has highlighted a number of replication problems in the discipline, wi...
Restoring confidence in psychological science findings: A call for direct replication studies Denis ...
We agree with the authors' arguments to make replication mainstream but contend that the poor replic...
Recent research in psychology has highlighted a number of replication problems in the di...
Current efforts started in 2012 by the Association for Psychological Science (APS) appear to be diff...
Social psychology and related disciplines are seeing a resurgence of interest in replication, as wel...
The last ten years have witnessed increasing awareness of questionable research practices (QRPs) in ...
Reproducibility is a defining feature of science, but the extent to which it characterizes current r...
Replications and robustness checks are key elements of the scientific method and a staple in many di...
Although replications are vital to scientific progress, psychologists rarely engage in systematic re...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...