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Large-Scale Replication Projects in Contemporary Psychological Research

Author

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  • Blakeley B. McShane
  • Jennifer L. Tackett
  • Ulf Böckenholt
  • Andrew Gelman

Abstract

Replication is complicated in psychological research because studies of a given psychological phenomenon can never be direct or exact replications of one another, and thus effect sizes vary from one study of the phenomenon to the next—an issue of clear importance for replication. Current large-scale replication projects represent an important step forward for assessing replicability, but provide only limited information because they have thus far been designed in a manner such that heterogeneity either cannot be assessed or is intended to be eliminated. Consequently, the nontrivial degree of heterogeneity found in these projects represents a lower bound on the true degree of heterogeneity. We recommend enriching large-scale replication projects going forward by embracing heterogeneity. We argue this is the key for assessing replicability: if effect sizes are sufficiently heterogeneous—even if the sign of the effect is consistent—the phenomenon in question does not seem particularly replicable and the theory underlying it seems poorly constructed and in need of enrichment. Uncovering why and revising theory in light of it will lead to improved theory that explains heterogeneity and increases replicability. Given this, large-scale replication projects can play an important role not only in assessing replicability but also in advancing theory.

Suggested Citation

  • Blakeley B. McShane & Jennifer L. Tackett & Ulf Böckenholt & Andrew Gelman, 2019. "Large-Scale Replication Projects in Contemporary Psychological Research," The American Statistician, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 73(S1), pages 99-105, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:amstat:v:73:y:2019:i:s1:p:99-105
    DOI: 10.1080/00031305.2018.1505655
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    Cited by:

    1. Bolton, Ruth N. & Gustafsson, Anders & Tarasi, Crina O. & Witell, Lars, 2022. "Managing a Global Retail Brand in Different Markets: Meta-Analyses of Customer Responses to Service Encounters," Journal of Retailing, Elsevier, vol. 98(2), pages 294-314.
    2. Daniel T. L. Shek & Diya Dou & Xiaoqin Zhu & Xiang Li & Lindan Tan, 2022. "Materialism, Egocentrism and Delinquent Behavior in Chinese Adolescents in Mainland China: A Short-Term Longitudinal Study," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 19(8), pages 1-15, April.
    3. Drazen, Allan & Dreber, Anna & Ozbay, Erkut Y. & Snowberg, Erik, 2021. "Journal-based replication of experiments: An application to “Being Chosen to Lead”," Journal of Public Economics, Elsevier, vol. 202(C).
    4. Pedro Mateu & Brooks Applegate & Chris L. Coryn, 2024. "Towards more credible conceptual replications under heteroscedasticity and unbalanced designs," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 58(1), pages 723-751, February.
    5. Sadri, Arash, 2022. "The Ultimate Cause of the “Reproducibility Crisis”: Reductionist Statistics," MetaArXiv yxba5, Center for Open Science.

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