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[105] Meaningless Means #1: The Average Effect
of Nudging Is d = .43

Posted on November 3, 2022November 29, 2022 by Joe Leif Uri

This post is the second in a series (see its introduction: htm) arguing that meta-analytic means are often meaningless, because (1) they include results from invalid tests of the research question of interest to the meta-analyst, and (2) they average across fundamentally incommensurable results. In this post we focus primarily on problem (2), though problem…

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[104] Meaningless Means: Some Fundamental Problems With Meta-Analytic Averages

Posted on November 1, 2022November 2, 2022 by Uri, Joe, & Leif

This post is an introduction to a series of posts about meta-analysis [1]. We think that many, perhaps most, meta-analyses in the behavioral sciences are invalid. In this introductory post, we make that case with arguments. In subsequent posts, we will make that case by presenting examples taken from published meta-analyses. We have recently written…

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[103] Mediation Analysis is Counterintuitively Invalid

Posted on September 26, 2022September 6, 2023 by Uri Simonsohn

Mediation analysis is very common in behavioral science despite suffering from many invalidating shortcomings. While most of the shortcomings are intuitive [1], this post focuses on a counterintuitive one. It is one of those quirky statistical things that can be fun to think about, so it would merit a blog post even if it were…

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[102] R on Steroids: Running WAY faster simulations in R

Posted on September 6, 2022September 6, 2022 by Uri Simonsohn

This post shows how to run simulations (loops) in R that can go 50 times faster than the default approach of running code like: for (k in 1:100) on your laptop. Obviously, a bit of a niche post. There are two steps. Step 1 involves running parallel rather than sequential loops [1]. This step can…

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[101] Transparency Makes Research Evaluable: Evaluating a Field Experiment on Crime Published in Nature

Posted on April 28, 2022April 28, 2022 by Joe & Uri

A recently published Nature paper (.htm) examined an interesting psychological hypothesis and applied it to a policy relevant question. The authors ran an ambitious field experiment and posted all their data, code, and materials. They also were transparent in showing the results of many different analyses, including some that yielded non-significant results. This is in…

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[100] Groundhog 2.0: Further addressing the threat R poses to reproducible research

Posted on April 8, 2022April 9, 2022 by Uri Simonsohn

About a year ago I wrote Colada[95], a post on the threat R poses to reproducible research. The core issue is the 'packages'. When using R, you can run library(some_package) and R can all of a sudden scrape a website, cluster standard errors, maybe even help you levitate. The problem is that packages get updated…

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[99] Hyping Fisher: The Most Cited 2019 QJE Paper Relied on an Outdated Stata Default to Conclude Regression p-values Are Inadequate

Posted on October 13, 2021October 27, 2021 by Uri Simonsohn

The paper titled "Channeling Fisher: Randomization Tests and the Statistical Insignificance of Seemingly Significant Experimental Results" (.htm) is currently the most cited 2019 article in the Quarterly Journal of Economics (372 Google cites). It delivers bad news to economists running experiments: their p-values are wrong. To get correct p-values, the article explains, they need to…

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[98] Evidence of Fraud in an Influential Field Experiment About Dishonesty

Posted on August 17, 2021April 23, 2022 by Uri, Joe, & Leif

This post is co-authored with a team of researchers who have chosen to remain anonymous. They uncovered most of the evidence reported in this post. These researchers are not connected in any way to the papers described herein. *** In 2012, Shu, Mazar, Gino, Ariely, and Bazerman published a three-study paper in PNAS (.htm) reporting…

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[97] Data Replicada #10: Does Goal Conflict Affect Time Spent on Work and Leisure?

Posted on May 4, 2021May 4, 2021 by Joe & Leif

In the tenth installment of Data Replicada, we report our attempt to replicate a recently published Journal of Consumer Research (JMR) article entitled, “Goal Conflict Encourages Work and Discourages Leisure” (.htm). The article’s two key hypotheses are right there in the title: People who are faced with a goal conflict are (1) more likely to…

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[96] Madam Speaker: Are Female Presenters Treated Worse in Econ Seminars?

Posted on April 30, 2021April 30, 2021 by Uri Simonsohn

A recent NBER paper titled "Gender and the Dynamics of Economics Seminars" (.htm) reports analyses of audience questions asked during 462 economics seminars, concluding that “women are asked more questions . . . and the questions asked of women are more likely to be patronizing or hostile . . . suggest[ing] yet another potential explanation…

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    © 2021, Uri Simonsohn, Leif Nelson, and Joseph Simmons. For permission to reprint individual blog posts on DataColada please contact us via email..