2016
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1521897113
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Contextual sensitivity in scientific reproducibility

Abstract: In recent years, scientists have paid increasing attention to reproducibility. For example, the Reproducibility Project, a large-scale replication attempt of 100 studies published in top psychology journals found that only 39% could be unambiguously reproduced. There is a growing consensus among scientists that the lack of reproducibility in psychology and other fields stems from various methodological factors, including low statistical power, researcher's degrees of freedom, and an emphasis on publishing surp… Show more

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Cited by 356 publications
(341 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…Although replicating previous observations is in itself relevant (Ioannidis, 2005; Van Bavel, Mende‐Siedlecki, Brady, & Reinero, 2016), the last decade's technological development of cameras and video quality additionally enables us to operate more cameras and hence record more spawning events at video resolutions revealing behaviors previously not documented in our population (e.g., egg eating including filial cannibalism). Moreover, the vibrations of charr during courtship and spawning leave a recordable sound track in the water column (discovered here by MBB).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Although replicating previous observations is in itself relevant (Ioannidis, 2005; Van Bavel, Mende‐Siedlecki, Brady, & Reinero, 2016), the last decade's technological development of cameras and video quality additionally enables us to operate more cameras and hence record more spawning events at video resolutions revealing behaviors previously not documented in our population (e.g., egg eating including filial cannibalism). Moreover, the vibrations of charr during courtship and spawning leave a recordable sound track in the water column (discovered here by MBB).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…A headline finding from this project was that only 36% of the attempted replications were "successful," in the sense that a significant effect in the same direction as the original was found. The publication of this report was met with a wide range of responses, including some focused on the fidelity of the replication studies, the criteria used to determine whether a replication was successful, the value of such a large-scale investment of resources, and so on (e.g., Anderson et al, 2016;Etz & Vandekerckhove, 2016;Gilbert, King, Pettigrew, 2016;Kunert, 2016;Maxwell, Lau, & Howard, 2015;Morey & Lakens, 2016;van Aert & van Assen, 2017;Van Bavel, Mende-Siedlecki, Brady, & Reinero, 2016). These responses (which continue to be published at the time of our writing this paper) focus on a broad range of challenges and objections to the value of replication studies as a whole.…”
Section: Concerns About Replicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it is yet unknown to what extent bias patterns and postulated risk factors are generalizable phenomena that threaten all scientific fields in similar ways and whether studies documenting such problems are reproducible (5)(6)(7). Indeed, evidence suggests that biases may be heterogeneously distributed in the literature.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%