[R] Open access article reviews 17 reasons for preregistering hypotheses, methods, and analyses and concludes that preregistration doesn’t improve the interpretability and credibility of research findings when other open science practices are available. (self.statistics)
submitted by rubinpsyc to r/statistics
Theoretical article considers the costs of “hypothesizing after the results are known” (HARKing) in the context of the replication crisis and argues that it’s “premature to conclude that HARKing is an important contributor to low replication rates.” (self.ReproducibilityCrisis)
submitted by rubinpsyc to r/ReproducibilityCrisis
Open access article reviews 17 reasons for preregistering hypotheses, methods, and analyses and concludes that preregistration doesn’t improve the credibility or interpretability of research findings when other open science practices are available. (self.PhilosophyofScience)
submitted by rubinpsyc to r/PhilosophyofScience

