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Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations

Researchers face many, often seemingly arbitrary, choices in formulating hypotheses, designing protocols, collecting data, analyzing data, and reporting results. Opportunistic use of “researcher degrees of freedom” aimed at obtaining statistical significance increases the likelihood of obtaining and...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bakker, Marjan, Veldkamp, Coosje L. S., van Assen, Marcel A. L. M., Crompvoets, Elise A. V., Ong, How Hwee, Nosek, Brian A., Soderberg, Courtney K., Mellor, David, Wicherts, Jelte M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7725296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33296358
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000937
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author Bakker, Marjan
Veldkamp, Coosje L. S.
van Assen, Marcel A. L. M.
Crompvoets, Elise A. V.
Ong, How Hwee
Nosek, Brian A.
Soderberg, Courtney K.
Mellor, David
Wicherts, Jelte M.
author_facet Bakker, Marjan
Veldkamp, Coosje L. S.
van Assen, Marcel A. L. M.
Crompvoets, Elise A. V.
Ong, How Hwee
Nosek, Brian A.
Soderberg, Courtney K.
Mellor, David
Wicherts, Jelte M.
author_sort Bakker, Marjan
collection PubMed
description Researchers face many, often seemingly arbitrary, choices in formulating hypotheses, designing protocols, collecting data, analyzing data, and reporting results. Opportunistic use of “researcher degrees of freedom” aimed at obtaining statistical significance increases the likelihood of obtaining and publishing false-positive results and overestimated effect sizes. Preregistration is a mechanism for reducing such degrees of freedom by specifying designs and analysis plans before observing the research outcomes. The effectiveness of preregistration may depend, in part, on whether the process facilitates sufficiently specific articulation of such plans. In this preregistered study, we compared 2 formats of preregistration available on the OSF: Standard Pre-Data Collection Registration and Prereg Challenge Registration (now called “OSF Preregistration,” http://osf.io/prereg/). The Prereg Challenge format was a “structured” workflow with detailed instructions and an independent review to confirm completeness; the “Standard” format was “unstructured” with minimal direct guidance to give researchers flexibility for what to prespecify. Results of comparing random samples of 53 preregistrations from each format indicate that the “structured” format restricted the opportunistic use of researcher degrees of freedom better (Cliff’s Delta = 0.49) than the “unstructured” format, but neither eliminated all researcher degrees of freedom. We also observed very low concordance among coders about the number of hypotheses (14%), indicating that they are often not clearly stated. We conclude that effective preregistration is challenging, and registration formats that provide effective guidance may improve the quality of research.
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spelling pubmed-77252962020-12-16 Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations Bakker, Marjan Veldkamp, Coosje L. S. van Assen, Marcel A. L. M. Crompvoets, Elise A. V. Ong, How Hwee Nosek, Brian A. Soderberg, Courtney K. Mellor, David Wicherts, Jelte M. PLoS Biol Meta-Research Article Researchers face many, often seemingly arbitrary, choices in formulating hypotheses, designing protocols, collecting data, analyzing data, and reporting results. Opportunistic use of “researcher degrees of freedom” aimed at obtaining statistical significance increases the likelihood of obtaining and publishing false-positive results and overestimated effect sizes. Preregistration is a mechanism for reducing such degrees of freedom by specifying designs and analysis plans before observing the research outcomes. The effectiveness of preregistration may depend, in part, on whether the process facilitates sufficiently specific articulation of such plans. In this preregistered study, we compared 2 formats of preregistration available on the OSF: Standard Pre-Data Collection Registration and Prereg Challenge Registration (now called “OSF Preregistration,” http://osf.io/prereg/). The Prereg Challenge format was a “structured” workflow with detailed instructions and an independent review to confirm completeness; the “Standard” format was “unstructured” with minimal direct guidance to give researchers flexibility for what to prespecify. Results of comparing random samples of 53 preregistrations from each format indicate that the “structured” format restricted the opportunistic use of researcher degrees of freedom better (Cliff’s Delta = 0.49) than the “unstructured” format, but neither eliminated all researcher degrees of freedom. We also observed very low concordance among coders about the number of hypotheses (14%), indicating that they are often not clearly stated. We conclude that effective preregistration is challenging, and registration formats that provide effective guidance may improve the quality of research. Public Library of Science 2020-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7725296/ /pubmed/33296358 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000937 Text en © 2020 Bakker et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Meta-Research Article
Bakker, Marjan
Veldkamp, Coosje L. S.
van Assen, Marcel A. L. M.
Crompvoets, Elise A. V.
Ong, How Hwee
Nosek, Brian A.
Soderberg, Courtney K.
Mellor, David
Wicherts, Jelte M.
Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title_full Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title_fullStr Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title_full_unstemmed Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title_short Ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
title_sort ensuring the quality and specificity of preregistrations
topic Meta-Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7725296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33296358
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000937
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