Implications of "Too Good to Be True" for Replication, Theoretical Claims, and Experimental Design: An Example Using Prominent Studies of Racial Bias.

scientific article

Implications of "Too Good to Be True" for Replication, Theoretical Claims, and Experimental Design: An Example Using Prominent Studies of Racial Bias. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3389/FPSYG.2016.01382
P3181OpenCitations bibliographic resource ID3382087
P932PMC publication ID5031767
P698PubMed publication ID27713708

P50authorGregory FrancisQ61770415
P2093author name stringFrancis G
P2860cites workBehavioral priming: it's all in the mind, but whose mind?Q21089914
An exploratory test for an excess of significant findingsQ24273224
Too good to be true: Publication bias in two prominent studies from experimental psychologyQ24273228
False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as SignificantQ24273231
Scientific Utopia: II. Restructuring Incentives and Practices to Promote Truth Over PublishabilityQ24273236
The Statistical Crisis in ScienceQ24492515
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 scienceQ28650336
Estimating the reproducibility of psychological scienceQ28922478
Investigating Variation in ReplicabilityQ28969609
Excess success for three related papers on racial biasQ30646384
Measuring the Prevalence of Questionable Research Practices With Incentives for Truth TellingQ34031507
Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affectQ34161614
Coping with Chaos: How Disordered Contexts Promote Stereotyping and DiscriminationQ34176714
Correcting the past: failures to replicate ψ.Q34296149
Seeing black: race, crime, and visual processingQ34376311
Assessing the robustness of power posing: no effect on hormones and risk tolerance in a large sample of men and womenQ34468699
Priming Intelligent Behavior: An Elusive PhenomenonQ34699855
Not yet human: implicit knowledge, historical dehumanization, and contemporary consequencesQ34739220
Biological conceptions of race and the motivation to cross racial boundariesQ34781934
When more data steer us wrong: replications with the wrong dependent measure perpetuate erroneous conclusionsQ35408386
A Multilab Preregistered Replication of the Ego-Depletion EffectQ36090553
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 experimentsQ42943824
Reply to Gregory FrancisQ42943826
The frequency of excess success for articles in Psychological ScienceQ43419573
Meta-analysis using effect size distributions of only statistically significant studiesQ46071808
Registered Replication Report: Schooler and Engstler-Schooler (1990).Q50577271
P-curve: A key to the file-drawerQ51186445
The ironic effect of significant results on the credibility of multiple-study articlesQ51329567
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 ImplicationsQ88026341
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectbiasQ742736
P304page(s)1382
P577publication date2016-09-22
P13046publication type of scholarly workreview articleQ7318358
P1433published inFrontiers in PsychologyQ2794477
P1476titleImplications of "Too Good to Be True" for Replication, Theoretical Claims, and Experimental Design: An Example Using Prominent Studies of Racial Bias
P478volume7

Search more.