articleScienceAug 29, 2014Closed access

Publication bias in the social sciences: Unlocking the file drawer

Stanford University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

We studied publication bias in the social sciences by analyzing a known population of conducted studies--221 in total--in which there is a full accounting of what is published and unpublished. We leveraged Time-sharing Experiments in the Social Sciences (TESS), a National Science Foundation-sponsored program in which researchers propose survey-based experiments to be run on representative samples of American adults. Because TESS proposals undergo rigorous peer review, the studies in the sample all exceed a substantial quality threshold. Strong results are 40 percentage points more likely to be published than are null results and 60 percentage points more likely to be written up. We provide direct evidence of…

Citation impact

1,583
total citations
FWCI
78.92
Percentile
100%
References
38
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Null (SQL)
  • Worry
  • Publication bias
  • Computer science
  • Psychology
  • Statistics
  • Mathematics
  • Data mining
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