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Re: [AUDITORY] Registered reports



3 points:

 

1. The issue of RR is tied up with the logic of null hypothesis testing. There are only two outcomes for null hypothesis testing: (i) a tentative conclusion that the null hypothesis should be regarded as inconsistent with the data and (ii) no conclusion about the null hypothesis can be reached from the data. Neither outcome refers to the alternative hypothesis, which is never tested. A nice idea in the literature is the counter-null. If I have a sample of 42 and an effect size of 0.2 (r-family), then my result is not significant: it is not inconsistent with a population effect size of 0. It is equally not inconsistent with the counter-null, a population effect size of ~0.4. It is less inconsistent with all population effect sizes in between the null and the counter-null. (NHST forces all these double negatives).

 

2. The current system of publish when p<0.05 is easy to game, hence all the so-called questionable practices. Any new system, like RR, will in due course become easy to game. By a long shot, the easiest (invalid) way to get an inflated effect size and an inappropriately small p is to test more participants than needed and keep only the “best” ones. RR will not prevent that.

 

3. NHST assumes random sampling, which no-one achieves. The forms of sampling we use in reality are all possibly subject to issues of non-independence of participants which leads to Type I error rates (false positives) that are well above 5%.

 

None of this is to argue against RR, just to observe that it doesn’t resolve many of the current problems. Any claim that it does, is in itself a kind of Type I error and Type I errors are very difficult to eradicate once accepted.

 

Roger Watt

Professor of Psychology

University of Stirling

 

From: AUDITORY - Research in Auditory Perception [mailto:AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ken Grant
Sent: 09 June 2018 06:19
To: AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Registered reports

 

Why aren’t these “failed” experiments published? What’s the definition of a failed experiment anyway. 

 

I think that if the scientific question is well formed and well motivated AND the methods sound and appropriate for addressing the question, then whatever the result may be, this seems like a good experiment and one that should be published. 

Sent from my iPhone

Ken W. Grant, PhD

Chief, Scientific and Clinical Studies

National Military Audiology and Speech-Pathology Center (NMASC)

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center

Bethesda, MD 20889

Office:  301-319-7043

Cell:  301-919-2957

 

 

 


On Jun 9, 2018, at 12:48 AM, Matthew Winn <mwinn2@xxxxxx> wrote:

The view that RRs will stifle progress is both true and false. While the increased load of advanced registration and rigidity in methods would, as Les points out, become burdensome for most of our basic work, there is another side to this. This is not a matter of morals (hiding a bad result, or fabricating a good result) or how to do our experiments. It’s a matter of the standards of *publication*, which you will notice was the scope of Tim’s original call to action. In general, we only ever read about experiments that came out well (and not the ones that didn’t). If there is a solution to that problem, then we should consider it, or at least acknowledge that some solution might be needed. This is partly the culture of scientific journals, and partly the culture of the institutions that employ us. There's no need to question anybody's integrity in order to appreciate some benefit of RRs.

Think for a moment about the amount of wasted hours spent by investigators who repeat the failed methods of their peers and predecessors, only because the outcomes of failed experiments were never published. Or those of us who cling to theories based on initial publications of work that later fails replication, but where those failed replications never get published. THIS stifles progress as well. If results were to be reported whether or not they come out as planned, we’d have a much more complete picture of the evidence for and against the ideas. Julia's story also resonates with me; we've all reviewed papers where we've thought "if only the authors had sought input before running this labor-intensive study, the data would be so much more valuable."

The arguments against RRs in this thread appear in my mind to be arguments against *compulsory* RRs for *all* papers in *all* journals, which takes the discussion off course. I have not heard such radical calls. If you don’t want to do a RR, then don’t do it. But perhaps we can appreciate the goals of RR and see how those goals might be realized with practices that suit our own fields of work.

Matt

 

--------------------------------------------------------------

Matthew Winn, Au.D., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Dept. of Speech & Hearing Sciences
University of Washington

 


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