Bibliography:

  1. ‘statistics’ tag

  2. ‘animal study methodology’ tag

  3. ‘publication bias’ tag

  4. ‘miscite bias’ tag

  5. ‘Rosenhan fraud’ tag

  6. Against Caring About Subtle Poisons

  7. The Existential Risk of Math Errors

  8. Feynman’s Maze-Running Story

  9. Open Questions

  10. How Often Does Correlation=Causality?

  11. One Man’s Modus Ponens

  12. Littlewood’s Law and the Global Media

  13. Regression To The Mean Fallacies

  14. Does Mouse Utopia Exist?

  15. Leprechaun Hunting & Citogenesis

  16. Hydrocephalus and Intelligence: The Hollow Men

  17. Why Correlation Usually ≠ Causation

  18. The Replication Crisis: Flaws in Mainstream Science

  19. How Should We Critique Research?

  20. Dual n-Back Meta-Analysis

  21. Lunar circadian rhythms

  22. Lizardman Constant in Surveys

  23. The Rise of the Science Sleuths

  24. 5b600ff68dbb1deea29966ec8e1f33dde31b75cb.html

  25. The global pattern of centenarians highlights deep problems in demography

  26. Political Language In Economics

  27. The Composer Has No Clothes

  28. 51af377ba89bc0e5fefdb1ce420a608a50b0ba8d.html

  29. Revisiting the relationship between economic freedom and development to account for statistical deception by autocratic regimes

  30. Questionable practices in machine learning

  31. Delving into ChatGPT usage in academic writing through excess vocabulary

  32. For Chinese Students, the New Tactic Against AI Checks: More AI

  33. Paper Tiger? Chinese Science and Home Bias in Citations

  34. Research misconduct in China: towards an institutional analysis

  35. Epigenetic age oscillates during the day

  36. Is economics self-correcting? Replications in the American Economic Review

  37. Maternal mortality in the United States: are the high and rising rates due to changes in obstetrical factors, maternal medical conditions, or maternal mortality surveillance?

  38. Psychology Remains Marginally Valid

  39. Illusory generalizability of clinical prediction models

  40. Heresy, witchcraft, Jean Gerson, scepticism and the use of placebo controls

  41. Prosocial motives underlie scientific censorship by scientists: A perspective and research agenda

  42. Published benefits of ivermectin use in Itajaí, Brazil for COVID-19 infection, hospitalization, and mortality are entirely explained by statistical artefacts

  43. A Quantitative Study of Inappropriate Image Duplication in the Journal Toxicology Reports

  44. Indoctrination in Introduction to Psychology

  45. The Garden of Forking Paths; An Evaluation of Joseph’s ‘A Reevaluation of the 1990 Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart IQ Study’

  46. Measuring Backsliding with Observables: Observable-to-Subjective Score Mapping (OSM)

  47. Empirical Design in Reinforcement Learning

  48. Final Report of Investigation Committee Concerning Allegations against Professor Francesca Gino—Case RI21-001

  49. Homeopathy can offer empirical insights on treatment effects in a null field

  50. Positive citation bias and over-interpreted results lead to misinformation on common mycorrhizal networks in forests

  51. Raising the value of research studies in psychological science by increasing the credibility of research reports: the transparent Psi project

  52. A discipline-wide investigation of the replicability of Psychology papers over the past two decades

  53. How do psychology researchers interpret the results of multiple replication studies?

  54. Comparing Analysis Blinding With Preregistration in the Many-Analysts Religion Project

  55. #ReceptioGate and the (absolute) state of academia: The numbers game has incentivized bad behavior

  56. A Spotlight on Bias in the Growth Mindset Intervention Literature: A Reply to Commentaries That Contextualize the Discussion (Oyserman 2023; Yan & Schuetze 2023) and Illustrate the Conclusion (Tipton Et Al 2023)

  57. Positive single-center randomized trials and subsequent multicenter randomized trials in critically ill patients: a systematic review

  58. Many researchers were not compliant with their published data sharing statement: a mixed-methods study

  59. The Future Failed: No Evidence for Precognition in a Large Scale Replication Attempt of Bem 2011

  60. Are Most Published Criminological Research Findings Wrong? Taking Stock of Criminological Research using a Bayesian Simulation Approach

  61. No evidence that mandatory open data policies increase error correction

  62. Inconvenient truths and the usefulness of identifying unknown unknowns

  63. Evaluating the Replicability of Social Priming Studies

  64. Effects of Randomized Treatment With Icosapent Ethyl and a Mineral Oil Comparator on Interleukin-1β, Interleukin-6, C-Reactive Protein, Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol, Homocysteine, Lipoprotein(a), and Lipoprotein-Associated Phospholipase A2: A REDUCE-IT Biomarker Substudy

  65. Is Psychological Science Self-Correcting? Citations Before and After Successful and Failed Replications

  66. Olfactory exposure to late-pregnant and lactating mice causes stress-induced analgesia in male mice

  67. The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence while controlling for genetic differences in cognition and socioeconomic background

  68. Do multiple experimenters improve the reproducibility of animal studies?

  69. Theoretical false positive psychology

  70. Does Democracy Matter?

  71. ‘I think I discovered a military base in the middle of the ocean’—Null Island, the most real of fictional places

  72. The Dunning-Kruger Effect Is Autocorrelation

  73. Clinical prediction models in psychiatry: a systematic review of two decades of progress and challenges

  74. Reproducible brain-wide association studies require thousands of individuals

  75. A 680,000-person megastudy of nudges to encourage vaccination in pharmacies

  76. The backfire effect after correcting misinformation is strongly associated with reliability

  77. Fooled by beautiful data: Visualization esthetics bias trust in science, news, and social media

  78. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the success of blinding in antidepressant RCTs

  79. Replication crisis and placebo studies: rebooting the bioethical debate

  80. Reproducibility in the Social Sciences

  81. The efficacy of psychotherapies and pharmacotherapies for mental disorders in adults: an umbrella review and meta-analytic evaluation of recent meta-analyses

  82. How malleable are cognitive abilities? A critical perspective on popular brief interventions

  83. More treatment but no less depression: The Treatment-Prevalence Paradox

  84. Megastudies improve the impact of applied behavioral science

  85. No Strong Evidence of Stereotype Threat in Females: A Reassessment of the Meta-Analysis

  86. Metformin treatment of diverse Caenorhabditis species reveals the importance of genetic background in longevity and healthspan extension outcomes

  87. The Psychophysiology of Political Ideology: Replications, Reanalyses, and Recommendations

  88. Predict science to improve science

  89. The Predicament of Establishing Persistence: Slavery and Human Capital in Africa

  90. The Implicit Association Test in Introductory Psychology Textbooks: Blind Spot for Controversy

  91. A pre-registered, multi-lab non-replication of the action-sentence compatibility effect (ACE)

  92. Are Conservatives More Rigid Than Liberals? A Meta-Analytic Test of the Rigidity-of-the-Right Hypothesis

  93. Empirical audit and review and an assessment of evidentiary value in research on the psychological consequences of scarcity

  94. Effect Sizes Reported in Highly Cited Emotion Research Compared With Larger Studies and Meta-Analyses Addressing the Same Questions

  95. The Role of Human Fallibility in Psychological Research: A Survey of Mistakes in Data Management

  96. On the reliability of published findings using the regression discontinuity design in political science

  97. Is Coffee the Cause or the Cure? Conflicting Nutrition Messages in 2 Decades of Online New York Times’ Nutrition News Coverage

  98. Causal and Associational Linking Language From Observational Research and Health Evaluation Literature in Practice: A systematic language evaluation

  99. TV Advertising Effectiveness and Profitability: Generalizable Results From 288 Brands

  100. Systematic Bias in the Progress of Research

  101. Common elective orthopaedic procedures and their clinical effectiveness: umbrella review of level 1 evidence

  102. Small Effects: The Indispensable Foundation for a Cumulative Psychological Science

  103. The revolution will be hard to evaluate: How co-occurring policy changes affect research on the health effects of social policies

  104. The piranha problem: Large effects swimming in a small pond

  105. Challenging the Link Between Early Childhood Television Exposure and Later Attention Problems: A Multiverse Approach

  106. The influence of hidden researcher decisions in applied microeconomics

  107. Man-Bites-Dog Contagion: Disproportionate Diffusion of Information about Rare Categories of Events

  108. Therapygenetic effects of 5-HTTLPR on cognitive-behavioral therapy in anxiety disorders: A meta-analysis

  109. Maximal positive controls: A method for estimating the largest plausible effect size

  110. Putting the Self in Self-Correction: Findings From the Loss-of-Confidence Project

  111. Artificial intelligence in drug discovery: what is realistic, what are illusions? Part 1: Ways to make an impact, and why we are not there yet: Quality is more important than speed and cost in drug discovery

  112. When the Numbers Do Not Add Up: The Practical Limits of Stochastologicals for Soft Psychology

  113. Honest signaling in academic publishing

  114. So Useful as a Good Theory? The Practicality Crisis in (Social) Psychological Theory

  115. Comment by Peter Norvig on "Being good at programming competitions correlates negatively with being good on the job"

  116. The statistical properties of RCTs and a proposal for shrinkage

  117. Many Labs 5: Testing Pre-Data-Collection Peer Review as an Intervention to Increase Replicability

  118. The reproducibility of statistical results in psychological research: An investigation using unpublished raw data

  119. Psychological measurement and the replication crisis: Four sacred cows

  120. Cite Unseen: Theory and Evidence on the Effect of Open Access on Cites to Academic Articles Across the Quality Spectrum

  121. Heterogeneity in direct replications in psychology and its association with effect size

  122. A replication crisis in methodological research?

  123. The small effects of political advertising are small regardless of context, message, sender, or receiver: Evidence from 59 real-time randomized experiments

  124. Towards Reproducible Brain-Wide Association Studies

  125. Laypeople Can Predict Which Social-Science Studies Will Be Replicated Successfully

  126. Specification curve analysis

  127. Can Short Psychological Interventions Affect Educational Performance? Revisiting the Effect of Self-Affirmation Interventions

  128. The Multiverse of Methods: Extending the Multiverse Analysis to Address Data-Collection Decisions

  129. How Do Scientific Views Change? Notes From an Extended Adversarial Collaboration

  130. What Is the Test-Retest Reliability of Common Task-Functional MRI Measures? New Empirical Evidence and a Meta-Analysis

  131. Health Recommendations and Selection in Health Behaviors

  132. Variability in the analysis of a single neuroimaging dataset by many teams

  133. Supercentenarian and remarkable age records exhibit patterns indicative of clerical errors and pension fraud

  134. Bilingualism Affords No General Cognitive Advantages: A Population Study of Executive Function in 11,000 People

  135. Statistics As Squid Ink: How Prominent Researchers Can Get Away With Misrepresenting Data

  136. Ideological diversity, hostility, and discrimination in philosophy

  137. On Attenuated Interactions, Measurement Error, and Statistical Power: Guidelines for Social and Personality Psychologists

  138. A controlled trial for reproducibility: For three years, part of DARPA has funded two teams for each project: one for research and one for reproducibility. The investment is paying off.

  139. What Do Editors Maximize? Evidence from 4 Economics Journals

  140. Foreign language learning in older age does not improve memory or intelligence: Evidence from a randomized controlled study

  141. The Stewart Retractions: A Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis

  142. Quantifying Independently Reproducible Machine Learning

  143. Compliance with legal requirement to report clinical trial results on ClinicalTrials.gov: a cohort study

  144. Implications of ideological bias in social psychology on clinical practice

  145. Cognitive and academic benefits of music training with children: A multilevel meta-analysis

  146. What Intellectual Progress Did I Make In The 2010s?

  147. Blinding to Remove Biases in Science and Society

  148. Why the Increasing Use of Complex Causal Models Is a Problem: On the Danger Sophisticated Theoretical Narratives Pose to Truth

  149. Estimating the deep replicability of scientific findings using human and artificial intelligence

  150. Lack of evidence for associative learning in pea plants

  151. Self-reported health without clinically measurable benefits among adult users of multivitamin and multimineral supplements: a cross-sectional study

  152. Do police killings of unarmed persons really have spillover effects? Reanalyzing Bor et al 2018

  153. Catching Cheating Students

  154. Why we sleep data manipulation: A smoking gun?

  155. Whassup with Why We Sleep?

  156. Comparing meta-analyses and preregistered multiple-laboratory replication projects

  157. Why We Sleep update: some thoughts while we wait for Matthew Walker to respond to Alexey Guzey’s criticisms

  158. Flexible yet fair: blinding analyses in experimental psychology

  159. Many Labs 2: Investigating Variation in Replicability Across Sample and Setting

  160. Is Matthew Walker’s Why We Sleep Riddled with Scientific and Factual Errors?

  161. [Comment on Guzey post]

  162. Matthew Walker’s Why We Sleep Is Riddled with Scientific and Factual Errors

  163. Effect of Lower Versus Higher Red Meat Intake on Cardiometabolic and Cancer Outcomes: A Systematic Review of Randomized Trials

  164. Anthropology’s Science Wars: Insights from a New Survey

  165. A national experiment reveals where a growth mindset improves achievement

  166. Debunking the Stanford Prison Experiment

  167. The Architectural Bias in Current Biblical Archaeology

  168. The maddening saga of how an Alzheimer’s ‘cabal’ thwarted progress toward a cure for decades

  169. Exploring Research-Methods Blogs in Psychology: Who Posts What About Whom, and With What Effect?

  170. Generalizable and Robust TV Advertising Effects

  171. Meta-Research: A comprehensive review of randomized clinical trials in three medical journals reveals 396 medical reversals

  172. The Hype Cycle of Working Memory Training

  173. Statistical Methods for Replicability Assessment

  174. Rigorous Large-Scale Educational RCTs Are Often Uninformative: Should We Be Concerned?

  175. What Can We Learn from Many Labs Replications? 3. Can replication studies detect fraud?

  176. Citogenesis: the Serious Circular Reporting Problem Wikipedians Are Fighting. Circular Reporting Is a Real Problem on Platforms like Wikipedia—And It’s Harder to Solve Than It Looks

  177. Orchestrating false beliefs about gender discrimination

  178. On the estimation of treatment effects with endogenous misreporting

  179. Large Teams Develop and Small Teams Disrupt Science and Technology

  180. The Advantages of Bilingualism Debate

  181. How Replicable Are Links Between Personality Traits and Consequential Life Outcomes? The Life Outcomes of Personality Replication Project

  182. A comprehensive meta-analysis of money priming

  183. No Support for Historical Candidate Gene or Candidate Gene-by-Interaction Hypotheses for Major Depression Across Multiple Large Samples

  184. Why Is Nonadherence to Cancer Screening Associated With Increased Mortality?

  185. Association of Non-adherence to Cancer Screening Examinations With Mortality From Unrelated Causes: A Secondary Analysis of the PLCO Cancer Screening Trial

  186. Mesmerising Science: The Franklin Commission and the Modern Clinical Trial

  187. Generalizability of heterogeneous treatment effect estimates across samples

  188. Predicting replication outcomes in the Many Labs 2 study

  189. Deterministic Implementations for Reproducibility in Deep Reinforcement Learning

  190. Effects of the Tennessee Prekindergarten Program on children’s achievement and behavior through third grade

  191. Evaluating the replicability of social science experiments in Nature and Science 2010–2015

  192. Statistical paradises and paradoxes in big data (1): Law of large populations, big data paradox, and the 2016 US presidential election

  193. Disentangling Bias and Variance in Election Polls

  194. Propagation of Mistakes in Papers

  195. Causal language and strength of inference in academic and media articles shared in social media (CLAIMS): A systematic review

  196. Acceptable losses: the debatable origins of loss aversion

  197. A real-life Lord of the Flies: the troubling legacy of the Robbers Cave experiment; In the early 1950s, the psychologist Muzafer Sherif brought together a group of boys at a US summer camp—and tried to make them fight each other. Does his work teach us anything about our age of resurgent tribalism? [an extract from The Lost Boys]

  198. Homogenous: The Political Affiliations of Elite Liberal Arts College Faculty

  199. "Are you gonna publish that?" Peer-reviewed publication outcomes of doctoral dissertations in psychology

  200. Knowing What We Are Getting: Evaluating Scientific Research on the International Space Station

  201. The prehistory of biology preprints: A forgotten experiment from the 1960s

  202. Percutaneous coronary intervention in stable angina (ORBITA): a double-blind, randomized controlled trial

  203. The Power of Bias in Economics Research

  204. Deep Reinforcement Learning that Matters

  205. Revisiting the Arcade Learning Environment: Evaluation Protocols and Open Problems for General Agents

  206. Does Diversity Pay? A Replication of Herring 2009

  207. Impossibly Hungry Judges

  208. How Gullible are We? A Review of the Evidence from Psychology and Social Science

  209. Avoiding erroneous citations in ecological research: read before you apply

  210. Coverage of Rosenhan’s ‘On Being Sane in Insane Places’ in Abnormal Psychology Textbooks

  211. Roosevelt Predicted to Win: Revisiting the 1936 Literary Digest Poll

  212. Laboratory environmental factors and pain behavior: the relevance of unknown unknowns to reproducibility and translation

  213. Empirical assessment of published effect sizes and power in the recent cognitive neuroscience and psychology literature

  214. Blind Analysis as a Correction for Confirmatory Bias in Physics and in Psychology

  215. When the music’s over. Does music skill transfer to children’s and young adolescents' cognitive and academic skills? A meta-analysis

  216. Meta-assessment of bias in science

  217. Does Teaching Children How to Play Cognitively Demanding Games Improve Their Educational Attainment? Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial of Chess Instruction in England

  218. Potential contribution of lifestyle and socioeconomic factors to healthy user bias in anti-hypertensives and lipid-lowering drugs

  219. What Does Any of This Have To Do with Physics? Einstein and Feynman ushered me into grad school, reality ushered me out

  220. Rational Judges, Not Extraneous Factors In Decisions

  221. Responses to Critiques on Machine Learning of Criminality Perceptions (Addendum of arXiv:1611.04135)

  222. A replication and methodological critique of the study ‘Evaluating drug trafficking on the Tor Network’

  223. How Multiple Imputation Makes a Difference

  224. Statistically Controlling for Confounding Constructs Is Harder than You Think

  225. Reading ‘The Baby Factory’ in Context

  226. When Quality Beats Quantity: Decision Theory, Drug Discovery, and the Reproducibility Crisis

  227. The Baby Factory: Difficult Research Objects, Disciplinary Standards, and the Production of Statistical-Significance

  228. Looking Across and Looking Beyond the Knowledge Frontier: Intellectual Distance, Novelty, and Resource Allocation in Science

  229. Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science

  230. The Economics of Reproducibility in Preclinical Research

  231. Likelihood of Null Effects of Large NHLBI Clinical Trials Has Increased over Time

  232. Small Telescopes: Detectability and the Evaluation of Replication Results

  233. Scholarly Context Not Found: One in Five Articles Suffers from Reference Rot

  234. The Corrupted Epidemiological Evidence Base of Psychiatry: A Key Driver of Over-Diagnosis

  235. Association Between Analytic Strategy and Estimates of Treatment Outcomes in Meta-analyses

  236. Practice Does Not Make Perfect: No Causal Effect of Music Practice on Music Ability

  237. Deliberate practice: Is that all it takes to become an expert?

  238. Olfactory exposure to males, including men, causes stress and related analgesia in rodents

  239. The Control Group Is Out Of Control

  240. Trap of trends to statistical-significance: likelihood of near-statistically-significant p-values becoming more statistically-significant with extra data

  241. The Chrysalis Effect: How Ugly Initial Results Metamorphosize Into Beautiful Articles

  242. Identifying The Effect Of Open Access On Citations Using A Panel Of Science Journals

  243. p-Curve: A Key to the File-Drawer

  244. Open Access to Data: An Ideal Professed but Not Practised

  245. Use of Placebo Controls in the Evaluation of Surgery: Systematic Review

  246. Too much success for recent groundbreaking epigenetic experiments

  247. Predictors and moderators of agreement between clinical and research diagnoses for children and adolescents

  248. The availability of research data declines rapidly with article age

  249. The Pervasive Problem With Placebos in Psychology: Why Active Control Groups Are Not Sufficient to Rule Out Placebo Effects

  250. Lizardman’s Constant Is 4%

  251. Investing in Preschool Programs

  252. A Survey on Data Reproducibility in Cancer Research Provides Insights into Our Limited Ability to Translate Findings from the Laboratory to the Clinic

  253. Star Wars: The Empirics Strike Back

  254. Empirical estimates suggest most published medical research is true

  255. What’s to know about the credibility of empirical economics?

  256. The Garden of Forking Paths: Why Multiple Comparisons Can Be a Problem, Even When There Is No `fishing Expedition` or `p-Hacking` and the Research Hypothesis Was Posited ahead of Time

  257. Investigating Variation in Replicability: The `Many Labs` Replication Project

  258. Randomized Controlled Trials Commissioned by the Institute of Education Sciences Since 2002: How Many Found Positive Versus Weak or No Effects?

  259. A Decade of Reversal: An Analysis of 146 Contradicted Medical Practices

  260. The Data Vigilante

  261. Flawed Science: The Fraudulent Research Practices of Social Psychologist Diederik Stapel

  262. Scientific Misconduct and the Myth of Self-Correction in Science

  263. A peculiar prevalence of p values just below 0.05

  264. The Iron Law Of Evaluation And Other Metallic Rules

  265. Depressive realism: A meta-analytic review

  266. Correlation and Causation in the Study of Personality

  267. How Near-Miss Events Amplify or Attenuate Risky Decision Making

  268. Measuring the Prevalence of Questionable Research Practices with Incentives for Truth-Telling

  269. The Ironic Effect of Significant Results on the Credibility of Multiple-Study Articles

  270. Chocolate Consumption, Cognitive Function, and Nobel Laureates

  271. Compliance With Mandatory Reporting of Clinical Trial Results on ClinicalTrials.gov: Cross Sectional Study

  272. Most reported genetic associations with general intelligence are probably false positives

  273. Willingness to Share Research Data Is Related to the Strength of the Evidence and the Quality of Reporting of Statistical Results

  274. Statistically-significant meta-analyses of clinical trials have modest credibility and inflated effects

  275. Negative results are disappearing from most disciplines and countries

  276. Artifact and Recording Concepts in EEG

  277. Notes on a New Philosophy of Empirical Science

  278. Epidemiology, Quality and Reporting Characteristics of Systematic Reviews of Traditional Chinese Medicine Interventions Published in Chinese Journals

  279. Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect

  280. Was There Really a Hawthorne Effect at the Hawthorne Plant? An Analysis of the Original Illumination Experiments

  281. BCR Fall 2011_full

  282. Excess Statistical-Significance Bias in the Literature on Brain Volume Abnormalities

  283. The Mismeasure of Science: Stephen Jay Gould versus Samuel George Morton on Skulls and Bias

  284. 4ced7e3fbb8ac2cbd6cf45483fcad2a3541b5e53.html

  285. Erroneous Analyses of Interactions in Neuroscience: a Problem of Statistical-Significance

  286. 723d8b11862fb41025b0ee3c030b986f076c9f8d.pdf

  287. Peer-review in a world with rational scientists: Toward selection of the average

  288. Japan, Checking on Its Oldest, Finds Many Gone

  289. On Rustles, Wolf Interpretations, and Other Wild Speculations

  290. ‘Positive’ Results Increase Down the Hierarchy of the Sciences

  291. Chinese Journal Finds 31% of Submissions Plagiarized

  292. Holiday reading: Cigarette smoking: an underused tool in high-performance endurance training

  293. Placebo interventions for all clinical conditions

  294. Rewriting History

  295. Large-Scale Assessment of the Effect of Popularity on the Reliability of Research

  296. How Many Scientists Fabricate and Falsify Research? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Survey Data

  297. When Superstars Flop: Public Status and Choking Under Pressure in International Soccer Penalty Shootouts

  298. Producing Wrong Data Without Doing Anything Obviously Wrong!

  299. Statin adherence and risk of accidents: a cautionary tale

  300. Models for potentially biased evidence in meta-analysis using empirically based priors

  301. Killing For Their Country: A New Look at ’Killology’

  302. Probing the Improbable: Methodological Challenges for Risks with Low Probabilities and High Stakes

  303. Figureheads, Ghost-Writers and Pseudonymous Quant Bloggers: The Recent Evolution of Authorship in Science Publishing

  304. Why Most Discovered True Associations Are Inflated

  305. The Allure of Equality: Uniformity in Probabilistic and Statistical Judgment

  306. Lost in Publication: How Measurement Harms Science

  307. 0fd8b4dd82556cd15084d69bed0878a2d44c9be7.pdf

  308. Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE): Explanation and Elaboration

  309. A mathematical theory of citing

  310. Proceeding From Observed Correlation to Causal Inference: The Use of Natural Experiments

  311. Meditation Practices for Health: State of the Research

  312. Testing multiple statistical hypotheses resulted in spurious associations: a study of astrological signs and health

  313. Mechanisms of the placebo effect of sweet cough syrups

  314. Lessons from the JMCB Archive

  315. Comparison of evidence on harms of medical interventions in randomized and nonrandomized studies

  316. Evidence of bias in estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness in seniors

  317. Contradicted and Initially Stronger Effects in Highly Cited Clinical Research

  318. Blind Analysis In Nuclear And Particle Physics

  319. Experimenter Effects and the Remote Detection of Staring

  320. An alternative to null-hypothesis statistical-significance tests

  321. When is a correlation between non-independent variables ‘spurious’?

  322. S. L. A. Marshall’s men against fire: New evidence regarding fire ratios

  323. Does High Self-Esteem Cause Better Performance, Interpersonal Success, Happiness, Or Healthier Lifestyles?

  324. Personal Reflections on Lessons Learned from Randomized Trials Involving Newborn Infants, 1951–1967

  325. C:/ncn/bre587

  326. Effects of remote, retroactive intercessory prayer on outcomes in patients with bloodstream infection: randomized controlled trial

  327. The Hazards of Predicting Divorce Without Crossvalidation

  328. Beleaguered Pygmalion: A History of the Controversy Over Claims that Teacher Expectancy Raises Intelligence

  329. Controlled trials: the 1948 watershed

  330. Applications of Randomness in System Performance Measurement

  331. The unpredictability paradox: review of empirical comparisons of randomized and non-randomized clinical trials

  332. The Science of Murphy’s Law: Life’s little annoyances are not as random as they seem: the awful truth is that the universe is against you

  333. Trends in science coverage: a content analysis of 3 US newspapers

  334. The Rise and Fall of Uncitedness

  335. The T-Experiments: Errors in Scientific Software

  336. f5c61ca9b9b7429114a3fc02d2b7bb933b22aeb1.pdf

  337. The ‘File Drawer Problem’ of Non-Significant Results: Does It Apply to Biological Research?

  338. The Social Misconstruction of Reality: Validity and Verification in the Scholarly Community

  339. The Big Crunch

  340. The Efficacy of Psychological, Educational, and Behavioral Treatment: Confirmation from Meta-Analysis

  341. The Influence of Prior Beliefs on Scientific Judgments of Evidence Quality

  342. On Being a Whistleblower: The Needleman Case

  343. How a Publicity Blitz Created The Myth of Subliminal Advertising

  344. Statistics as Rhetoric in Psychology

  345. The Crisis in Measurement Literacy in Psychology and Education

  346. What’s Wrong With Psychology Anyway?

  347. Possible inaccuracies occurring in citation analysis

  348. Methods for Studying Coincidences

  349. Walter Stewart: Fighting Fraud in Science (They Call Him the ‘terrorist of the Lab’, but This Self-Appointed Scourge of Scientific Fraud Has Reason to Suspect That As Much As 25% of All Research Papers May Be Intentionally Fudged) [Interview]

  350. About Face: The Odyssey of an American Warrior § S. L. A. Marshall (SLAM)

  351. Informal Conceptions of Probability

  352. Statistical Procedures and the Justification of Knowledge in Psychological Science

  353. Assessing uncertainty in physical constants

  354. Magnitude of teacher expectancy effects on pupil IQ as a function of the credibility of expectancy induction: A synthesis of findings from 18 experiments

  355. The Citation Bias: Fad and Fashion in the Judgment and Decision Literature

  356. An Investigation of the Validity of Bibliographic Citations

  357. Taboo, Constraint, and Responsibility in Educational Research

  358. Fake!

  359. Rating the ratings: Assessing the psychometric quality of rating data

  360. Reliability: A Review of Psychometric Basics and Recent Marketing Practices

  361. Consumer Research: How Valid and Useful Are All Our Consumer Behavior Research Findings?: A State-Of-The-Art Review

  362. What Is Not What in Statistics

  363. Experimenter Effects in Behavioral Research: Enlarged Edition

  364. Critical Analysis of the Statistical and Ethical Implications of Various Definitions of ’Test Bias’

  365. Comparative Studies of Psychotherapies: Is It True That "Everyone Has Won and All Must Have Prizes"?

  366. Editorial [EJP editorial on registered reports]

  367. Models of Control and Control of Bias

  368. Spurious Regressions in Econometrics

  369. Social Sciences As Sorcery

  370. Social Psychology as History

  371. Interpreting regression toward the mean in developmental research

  372. Pygmalion Reconsidered: A Case Study in Statistical Inference: Reconsideration of the Rosenthal-Jacobson Data on Teacher Expectancy

  373. Nuisance Variables and the Ex Post Facto Design

  374. Pygmalion In The Classroom: Teacher Expectation and Pupil’s Intellectual Development

  375. Theory-Testing in Psychology and Physics: A Methodological Paradox

  376. Control of Spurious Association and the Reliability of the Controlled Variable

  377. Is the Scientific Paper Fraudulent? Yes; It Misrepresents Scientific Thought

  378. Responsibility for Raw Data

  379. Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD-25): Xv. the Effects Produced By Substitution of a Tap Water Placebo

  380. Evaluating the Effect of Inadequately Measured Variables in Partial Correlation Analysis

  381. Halo effect: A constant error in psychological ratings

  382. The Impersonator: The Fake Data Were Coming From Inside the Lab

  383. After Century of Removing Appendixes, Docs Find Antibiotics Can Be Enough: In a Five-Year Follow-Up, Nearly Two-Thirds of Patients Never Needed Surgery

  384. The High Cost of Not Doing Experiments

  385. Metacritic Has A (File-Drawer) Problem

  386. Help, Doctor, I'Ve Been Exposed to [Proprietary]!

  387. Alexey Guzey’s homepage

  388. Open science challenges, benefits and tips in early career and beyond

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  390. Why Most Published Research Findings Are False

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  667. Alexey Guzey’s homepage

  668. Alexey Guzey’s homepage

  669. https%253A%252F%252Fguzey.com%252F.html