Authors
David J Stanley, Jeffrey R Spence
Publication date
2014/5
Journal
Perspectives on Psychological Science
Volume
9
Issue
3
Pages
305-318
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Failures to replicate published psychological research findings have contributed to a “crisis of confidence.” Several reasons for these failures have been proposed, the most notable being questionable research practices and data fraud. We examine replication from a different perspective and illustrate that current intuitive expectations for replication are unreasonable. We used computer simulations to create thousands of ideal replications, with the same participants, wherein the only difference across replications was random measurement error. In the first set of simulations, study results differed substantially across replications as a result of measurement error alone. This raises questions about how researchers should interpret failed replication attempts, given the large impact that even modest amounts of measurement error can have on observed associations. In the second set of simulations, we illustrated the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DJ Stanley, JR Spence - Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2014