The past several years have been bruising ones for the credibility of the social sciences. A star social psychologist was caught fabricating data, leading to more than 50 retracted papers. A top journal published a study supporting the existence of ESP. The journal Science pulled a political science paper on the effect of gay canvassers on voters’ behavior – also because of concerns about fake data.
A University of Virginia psychologist decided in 2011 to find out
whether such suspect science was a widespread problem. He and his team
recruited more than 250 researchers, identified 100 studies that had
each been published in one of three leading journals in 2008, and
rigorously redid the experiments in close collaboration with the
original authors.
The
results are now in: More than 60 of the studies did not hold up. They
include findings that were circulated at the time — that a strong
skepticism of free will increases the likelihood of cheating; that physical distances could subconsciously influence people’s sense of personal closeness; that attached women are more attracted to single men when highly fertile than when less so.
The new analysis, called the Reproducibility Project
and posted Thursday by Science, found no evidence of fraud or that any
original study was definitively false. Rather, it concluded that the
evidence for most published findings was not nearly as strong as
originally claimed.
“Less
than half — even lower than I thought,” said Dr. John Ioannidis, a
director of Stanford University’s Meta-Research Innovation Center, who
once estimated that about half of published results across medicine were
inflated or wrong. Dr. Ioannidis said the problem was hardly confined
to psychology and could be worse in other fields, including cell
biology, economics, neuroscience, clinical medicine, and animal research
Add to this the fabrications peddled about psychotropic drugs, nutrition and global warming, and the integrity of scientists is called sharply into question.
ReplyDeleteA good review of the issue and its implication from a watchdog blog dedicated to the issue: http://retractionwatch.com/2015/08/27/yes-many-psychology-findings-may-be-too-good-to-be-true-now-what/#more-31707
ReplyDelete