Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the available evidence for scientific claims. For the past decade, psychological scientists have been increasingly concerned about the degree of such distortion in their literature. A new publication format has been developed to prevent selective reporting: In Registered Reports (RRs), peer review and the decision to publish take place before results are known. We compared the results in published RRs (N = 71 as of November 2018) with a random sample of hypothesis-testing studies from the standard literature (N = 152) in psychology. Analyzing the first hypothesis of each article, we found 96% positive results in standard reports but only 44% posi...
Our job as scientists is to discover truths about the world. We generate hypotheses, collect data, a...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
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...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Aims: The modern scientific publishing system suffers from many problems, amongst which one of the m...
This article describes a systematic analysis of the relationship between empirical data and theoreti...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Our job as scientists is to discover truths about the world. We generate hypotheses, collect data, a...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
Selectively publishing results that support the tested hypotheses (“positive” results) distorts the ...
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...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Ignoring replications and negative results is bad for science. This special issue presents a novel p...
Aims: The modern scientific publishing system suffers from many problems, amongst which one of the m...
This article describes a systematic analysis of the relationship between empirical data and theoreti...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Our job as scientists is to discover truths about the world. We generate hypotheses, collect data, a...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...
Psychology journals rarely publish nonsignificant results. At the same time, it is often very unlike...