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This led prominent scholars to declare a "crisis of confidence" in psychology and other fields, [42] and the ensuing situation came to be known as the "replication crisis". Although the beginning of the replication crisis can be traced to the early 2010s, some authors point out that concerns about replicability and research practices in the ...
The project, along with broader action in response to the replication crisis, has helped spur changes in scientific culture and publishing practices. [3] [4] The results of the Reproducibility Project might also affect public trust in psychology.
Replication crisis. Part of the book has been swept up in the replication crisis facing psychology and the social sciences. It was discovered many prominent research ...
The replication crisis (or credibility crisis) is a methodological crisis in science that researchers began to acknowledge around the 2010s. The controversy revolves around the lack of reproducibility of many scientific findings, including those in psychology (e.g., among 100 studies, less than 50% of the findings were replicated). [5] [6]
The growth of metascience and the recognition of a scientific replication crisis have bolstered the paper's credibility, and led to calls for methodological reforms in scientific research. [8] [9] In commentaries and technical responses, statisticians Goodman and Greenland identified several weaknesses in Ioannidis' model.
The Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science (SIPS) is a professional organization created in response to the replication crisis in social psychology. [1] [2] [3] It was founded at its inaugural meeting that took place June 6-8th, 2016 at Center for Open Science in Charlottesville.
The high dropout rates have provoked neither an internal crisis nor a re-evaluation of programming. Stamper dismissed dropouts as “attrition by personal choice.” An addict’s failure is considered a result of not being ready for treatment, never an indication that there might be a problem with the treatment itself.
Amongst the issues about which Witkowski is most concerned are the quality, utility and validity of much of the research being published nowadays; the ‘replication crisis’; the efficacy of many psychotherapeutic practices that psychologists seem willing to embrace; and the failure of psychologists to mount a sufficiently strong challenge to ...