This study assesses the extent of selective hypothesis reporting in psychological research by comparing the hypotheses found in a set of 459 preregistrations to the hypotheses found in the corresponding papers. We found that more than half of the preregistered studies we assessed contain omitted hypotheses (N = 224; 52.2%) or added hypotheses (N = 227; 56.8%), and about one-fifth of studies contain changed hypotheses (N = 82; 19%). We found only a small number of studies with demoted hypotheses (N = 2; 1%) and no studies with promoted hypotheses. In all, 59% of studies include at least one hypothesis in one or more of these categories, indicating a substantial bias in presenting and selecting hypotheses by researchers and/or reviewers/edito...
This article is offered as a contribution to the audit of psychological research in two of the premi...
The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research practice that app...
Current efforts started in 2012 by the Association for Psychological Science (APS) appear to be diff...
Selective reporting practices (SRPs)—adding, dropping, or altering study elements when preparing rep...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
When studies with positive results that support the tested hypotheses have a higher probability of b...
The preregistration of a study’s hypotheses, methods, and data-analyses steps is becoming a popular ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
The issue of publication bias in psychological science is one that has remained difficult to address...
The issue of publication bias in psychological science is one that has remained difficult to address...
The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research practice that app...
Background: The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research pract...
In order to study the prevalence, nature (direction), and causes of reporting errors in psychology, ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
This article is offered as a contribution to the audit of psychological research in two of the premi...
The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research practice that app...
Current efforts started in 2012 by the Association for Psychological Science (APS) appear to be diff...
Selective reporting practices (SRPs)—adding, dropping, or altering study elements when preparing rep...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
When studies with positive results that support the tested hypotheses have a higher probability of b...
The preregistration of a study’s hypotheses, methods, and data-analyses steps is becoming a popular ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
The issue of publication bias in psychological science is one that has remained difficult to address...
The issue of publication bias in psychological science is one that has remained difficult to address...
The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research practice that app...
Background: The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research pract...
In order to study the prevalence, nature (direction), and causes of reporting errors in psychology, ...
Despite discussions about the replicability of findings in psychological research, two issues have b...
This article is offered as a contribution to the audit of psychological research in two of the premi...
The removal of outliers to acquire a significant result is a questionable research practice that app...
Current efforts started in 2012 by the Association for Psychological Science (APS) appear to be diff...