• The prevalence of statistical reporting errors in psychology

    On: 21. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1057
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    This study documents reporting errors in a sample of over 250,000 p-values reported in eight major psychology journals from 1985 until 2013, using the new R package “statcheck.” statcheck retrieved null-hypothesis significance testing (NHST) results from over half of the articles from this period. In line with earlier research, we found that half of all published psychology papers that use NHST contained at least one p-value that was inconsistent with its test statistic and degrees of freedom. One in eight papers contained a grossly inconsistent p-value that may have affected the statistical conclusion. In contrast to earlier findings, we found that the average prevalence of inconsistent p-values has been stable over the years or has declined. The prevalence of gross inconsistencies was higher in p-values reported as significant than in p-values reported as nonsignificant. This could indicate a systematic bias in favor of significant results. Possible solutions for the high prevalence of reporting inconsistencies could be to encourage sharing data, to let co-authors check results in a so-called “co-pilot model,” and to use statcheck to flag possible inconsistencies in one’s own manuscript or during the review process (cf. Nuijten et al., 2015). []

     

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  • Improving Research Practices, From Beginning to End

    On: 20. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1013
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    Efforts to promote replication, preregistration, and new analytic approaches now represent just some of the advances psychological scientists have been making toward improving research practices in the field. With the recognition that long-accepted research practices have certain inherent problems comes the question: What now? []

     

     

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  • Equivalent statistics and data interpretation

    On: 17. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1115
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    „Recent reform efforts in psychological science have led to a plethora of choices for scientists to analyze their data. A scientist making an inference about their data must now decide whether to report a p value, summarize the data with a standardized effect size and its confidence interval, report a Bayes Factor, or use other model comparison methods. To make good choices among these options, it is necessary for researchers to understand the characteristics of the various statistics used by the different analysis frameworks. Toward that end, this paper makes two contributions. First, it shows that for the case of a two-sample t test with known sample sizes, many different summary statistics are mathematically equivalent in the sense that they are based on the very same information in the data set. When the sample sizes are known, the p value provides as much information about a data set as the confidence interval of Cohen’s d or a JZS Bayes factor. Second, this equivalence means that different analysis methods differ only in their interpretation of the empirical data. At first glance, it might seem that mathematical equivalence of the statistics suggests that it does not matter much which statistic is reported, but the opposite is true because the appropriateness of a reported statistic is relative to the inference it promotes. Accordingly, scientists should choose an analysis method appropriate for their scientific investigation. A direct comparison of the different inferential frameworks provides some guidance for scientists to make good choices and improve scientific practice.“ (cf. Francis, 2016) []

     

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  • Scientific method: Statistical errors / Wenn Forscher durch den Signifikanztest fallen

    On: 16. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1030
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    P values, the ‚gold standard‘ of statistical validity, are not as reliable as many scientists assume. []

    Grobe Fehler in Statistik: Der „p-Wert“ gilt als Goldstandard, doch er führt in die Irre. Er schadet damit seit Jahren der Wissenschaft. []

     

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  • Erste Fachhochschule darf Doktortitel verleihen

    On: 10. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 880
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    Es ist eine grundlegende Wende im Promotionsrecht: Erstmals kann eine Hochschule in Deutschland künftig Doktortitel vergeben. Bisher hatten nur Universitäten dieses Privileg … []

     

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  • BMBF stärkt Open Access

    On: 7. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 904
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    Das Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) hat eine umfassende Open Access-Strategie auf den Weg gebracht. Die neuen Maßnahmen sollen laut Ministerium dazu beitragen, dass Open Access sich als Standardmodell des wissenschaftlichen Publizierens in Deutschland etabliere. []

     

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  • Eine Analyse der Open-Access-Kosten in Deutschland

    On: 7. Oktober 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 893
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    In den vergangenen Monaten kündigten einzelne Universitäten den Bezug wissenschaftlicher Zeitschriften großer Wissenschaftsverlage wegen zu stark gestiegener Preise. Open Access wurde als günstige Alternative beschrieben, die die Marktmacht der großen Wissenschaftsverlage durchbrechen sollte. Eine aktuelle Studie in Deutschland zu den Open Access-Publikationsgebühren bringt ernüchternde Ergebnisse. Eine Analyse der Open-Access-Kosten in Deutschland – Neue Marktkonzentration? []

     

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  • Best Short Paper Award at the Mensch und Computer 2016 Conference

    On: 6. September 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1082
     1

    Our paper received the best short paper award at the Mensch und Computer 2016 conference. Thanks a lot!

     

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  • 23rd International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology (IACCP 2016) in Nagoya, Japan

    On: 24. Juli 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 983
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    The 23rd International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology (IACCP 2016) is held July 30th to August 3rd, 2016 in Nagoya, Japan.

    Our contribution to IACCP 2016:

    Oehl, M., Brandenburg, S., Rau, P. L. P., Guo, Z., & Kanno, T. (2016). Driving Anger Experience and Its Expression in China vs. Japan – An International Cross-Cultural Comparison. Abstracts of the 23rd International Congress of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Nagoya, Japan. Abstract retrieved from http://abstracts.iaccp2016.com/submission23791/

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  • 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016) in Yokohama, Japan

    On: 24. Juli 2016
    In: Allgemein
    Views: 1427
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    The 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016), held every four years under the auspices of the International Union of Psychological Science (IUPsyS) will be organized around the theme „Diversity in Harmony: Insights from Psychology.“ ICP 2016 welcomes all psychological researchers from throughout the world and from all areas of psychology and related disciplines. The ICP 2016 is held July, 24-29 in Yokohama, Japan.

    Our contributions to ICP 2016:

    Emmermann, B., & Oehl, M. (2016, July). Anger Experience of Cyclists in Traffic: Are Professional Cyclists Different from Regular Cyclists?. Poster presented at the 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016), Yokohama, Japan.

    Emmermann, B., & Oehl, M. (2016, July). Introducing the Cycling Anger Scale. Poster presented at the 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016), Yokohama, Japan.

    Oehl, M., Kaup, I., & Kanno, T. (2016, July). Driving Anger in Japan – A Japanese Validation of the Driving Anger Scale and Cross-cultural Comparison. Poster presented at the 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016), Yokohama, Japan.

    Oehl, M., Reiser, J. E., & Tschöpe, N. (2016, July). Exploring the uncanny valley effect in affective social robotics.Poster presented at the 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016), Yokohama, Japan.

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