scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Gregory Francis | Q61770415 |
P2093 | author name string | Francis G | |
P2860 | cites work | Behavioral priming: it's all in the mind, but whose mind? | Q21089914 |
An exploratory test for an excess of significant findings | Q24273224 | ||
Too good to be true: Publication bias in two prominent studies from experimental psychology | Q24273228 | ||
False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant | Q24273231 | ||
Scientific Utopia: II. Restructuring Incentives and Practices to Promote Truth Over Publishability | Q24273236 | ||
The Statistical Crisis in Science | Q24492515 | ||
Publication bias and the limited strength model of self-control: has the evidence for ego depletion been overestimated? | Q28246023 | ||
Excess success for psychology articles in the journal science | Q28650336 | ||
Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science | Q28922478 | ||
Investigating Variation in Replicability | Q28969609 | ||
Excess success for three related papers on racial bias | Q30646384 | ||
Measuring the Prevalence of Questionable Research Practices With Incentives for Truth Telling | Q34031507 | ||
Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect | Q34161614 | ||
Coping with Chaos: How Disordered Contexts Promote Stereotyping and Discrimination | Q34176714 | ||
Correcting the past: failures to replicate ψ. | Q34296149 | ||
Seeing black: race, crime, and visual processing | Q34376311 | ||
Assessing the robustness of power posing: no effect on hormones and risk tolerance in a large sample of men and women | Q34468699 | ||
Priming Intelligent Behavior: An Elusive Phenomenon | Q34699855 | ||
Not yet human: implicit knowledge, historical dehumanization, and contemporary consequences | Q34739220 | ||
Biological conceptions of race and the motivation to cross racial boundaries | Q34781934 | ||
When more data steer us wrong: replications with the wrong dependent measure perpetuate erroneous conclusions | Q35408386 | ||
A Multilab Preregistered Replication of the Ego-Depletion Effect | Q36090553 | ||
The same old New Look: Publication bias in a study of wishful seeing. | Q36362140 | ||
Reevaluating excess success in psychological science. | Q38732052 | ||
Confirming the appearance of excess success: Reply to van Boxtel and Koch (2016). | Q38937540 | ||
Is the survival-processing memory advantage due to richness of encoding? | Q39502686 | ||
Is there a Publication Bias in Behavioural Intranasal Oxytocin Research on Humans? Opening the File Drawer of One Laboratory. | Q39909055 | ||
You Could Have Just Asked: Reply to Francis (2012). | Q40744511 | ||
Meta-regression approximations to reduce publication selection bias. | Q40858728 | ||
A Short (Personal) Future History of Revolution 2.0. | Q42660033 | ||
Too much success for recent groundbreaking epigenetic experiments | Q42943824 | ||
Reply to Gregory Francis | Q42943826 | ||
The frequency of excess success for articles in Psychological Science | Q43419573 | ||
Meta-analysis using effect size distributions of only statistically significant studies | Q46071808 | ||
Registered Replication Report: Schooler and Engstler-Schooler (1990). | Q50577271 | ||
P-curve: A key to the file-drawer | Q51186445 | ||
The ironic effect of significant results on the credibility of multiple-study articles | Q51329567 | ||
Bayesian t tests for accepting and rejecting the null hypothesis. | Q51848247 | ||
It Does Not Follow: Evaluating the One-Off Publication Bias Critiques by Francis (2012a, 2012b, 2012c, 2012d, 2012e, in press) | Q85581134 | ||
The red-attractiveness effect, applying the Ioannidis and Trikalinos (2007b) test, and the broader scientific context: A reply to Francis (2013) | Q86091869 | ||
Misguided Effort With Elusive Implications | Q88026341 | ||
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P921 | main subject | bias | Q742736 |
P304 | page(s) | 1382 | |
P577 | publication date | 2016-09-22 | |
P13046 | publication type of scholarly work | review article | Q7318358 |
P1433 | published in | Frontiers in Psychology | Q2794477 |
P1476 | title | Implications of "Too Good to Be True" for Replication, Theoretical Claims, and Experimental Design: An Example Using Prominent Studies of Racial Bias | |
P478 | volume | 7 |
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