AI Article Synopsis

  • Psychology is facing a replication crisis, leading to skepticism about previous research findings due to common miscalculations related to sample size and effect sizes.
  • Researchers often plan replication studies using effect sizes from original studies, but this method overlooks biases and uncertainty, potentially resulting in actual power lower than the intended .80.
  • Simulations show that while methods to correct for bias and uncertainty can improve power, they are not a complete solution for originally underpowered studies, emphasizing the need for adequately powered original studies and better-designed replication studies.

Article Abstract

Psychology is undergoing a replication crisis. The discussion surrounding this crisis has centered on mistrust of previous findings. Researchers planning replication studies often use the original study sample effect size as the basis for sample size planning. However, this strategy ignores uncertainty and publication bias in estimated effect sizes, resulting in overly optimistic calculations. A psychologist who intends to obtain power of .80 in the replication study, and performs calculations accordingly, may have an actual power lower than .80. We performed simulations to reveal the magnitude of the difference between actual and intended power based on common sample size planning strategies and assessed the performance of methods that aim to correct for effect size uncertainty and/or bias. Our results imply that even if original studies reflect actual phenomena and were conducted in the absence of questionable research practices, popular approaches to designing replication studies may result in a low success rate, especially if the original study is underpowered. Methods correcting for bias and/or uncertainty generally had higher actual power, but were not a panacea for an underpowered original study. Thus, it becomes imperative that 1) original studies are adequately powered and 2) replication studies are designed with methods that are more likely to yield the intended level of power.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00273171.2017.1289361DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

replication studies
16
original studies
12
original study
12
sample size
12
size planning
8
actual power
8
studies
7
original
6
replication
6
power
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!