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Cherry Picking

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  • Lang, Megan

    (The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab)

  • Qiu, Wenfeng

Abstract

Measures like pre-analysis plans ask researchers to describe planned data collection and justify data exclusions, but they provide little enforceable oversight of primary data collection. We show that a simple algorithm can select large subsets of data that yield economically meaningful and statistically significant treatment effects. The subsets cannot be distinguished from a random sample of the original data, rendering the selection undetectable if peer reviewers are unaware of the size of the original dataset. Our results hold using simulated data and replication data from a well-known study. We show that there are few natural deterrents to dataset manipulation: the results in our selected subset are robust to a range of alternative specifications, our algorithm performs well under complex sampling strategies, and our subset can yield artificially high effects on multiple outcomes. We conclude by proposing a measure to prevent such manipulation in field experiments.

Suggested Citation

  • Lang, Megan & Qiu, Wenfeng, 2021. "Cherry Picking," MetaArXiv as9zd_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:metaar:as9zd_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/as9zd_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    4. Miguel, E & Camerer, C & Casey, K & Cohen, J & Esterling, KM & Gerber, A & Glennerster, R & Green, DP & Humphreys, M & Imbens, G & Laitin, D & Madon, T & Nelson, L & Nosek, BA & Petersen, M & Sedlmayr, 2014. "Promoting Transparency in Social Science Research," Department of Economics, Working Paper Series qt0wt4q2q8, Department of Economics, Institute for Business and Economic Research, UC Berkeley.
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