Publication Bias Produces a "Decline Effect"

Jennions, similarly, argues that the decline effect is largely a product of publication bias, or the tendency of scientists and scientific journals to prefer positive data over null results, which is what happens when no effect is found. The bias was first identified by the statistician Theodore Sterling, in 1959, after he noticed that ninety-seven per cent of all published psychological studies with statistically significant data found the effect they were looking for. A “significant” result is defined as any data point that would be produced by chance less than five per cent of the time. This ubiquitous test was invented in 1922 by the English mathematician Ronald Fisher, who picked five per cent as the boundary line, somewhat arbitrarily, because it made pencil and slide-rule calculations easier. Sterling saw that if ninety-seven per cent of psychology studies were proving their hypotheses, either psychologists were extraordinarily lucky or they published only the outcomes of successful experiments. In recent years, publication bias has mostly been seen as a problem for clinical trials, since pharmaceutical companies are less interested in publishing results that aren’t favorable. But it’s becoming increasingly clear that publication bias also produces major distortions in fields without large corporate incentives, such as psychology and ecology.

Notes:

Because publications are biased towards positive results, when a phenomenon produced in earlier studies turns out not to be true, then later studies will increasingly have difficulty reproducing the results.

Folksonomies: research decline effect

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/art and entertainment/books and literature (0.232164)
/technology and computing/consumer electronics/game systems and consoles/nintendo (0.171254)

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Concepts:
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Psychology (0.954845): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Statistical significance (0.818210): dbpedia | freebase
Publishing (0.683669): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Clinical trial (0.671304): dbpedia | freebase
Scientific method (0.664529): dbpedia | freebase
Ronald Fisher (0.652670): dbpedia | freebase | yago
Null hypothesis (0.615879): dbpedia | freebase

 The Truth Wears Off, Is There Something Wrong With the Scientific Method?
Electronic/World Wide Web>Internet Article:  Lehrer, Jonah (December 13, 2010), The Truth Wears Off, Is There Something Wrong With the Scientific Method?, New Yorker, New York, NY, Retrieved on 2011-01-02
  • Source Material [www.newyorker.com]
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    Schemas

    01 JAN 2011

     Notes on the Decline Effect

    A collection of memes about the tendency of much published research to not be reproducible and what biases cause this phenomenon.
     3