Is the Replicability Crisis Overblown? Three Arguments Examined
University of California San Diego
Abstract
We discuss three arguments voiced by scientists who view the current outpouring of concern about replicability as overblown. The first idea is that the adoption of a low alpha level (e.g., 5%) puts reasonable bounds on the rate at which errors can enter the published literature, making false-positive effects rare enough to be considered a minor issue. This, we point out, rests on statistical misunderstanding: The alpha level imposes no limit on the rate at which errors may arise in the literature (Ioannidis, 2005b). Second, some argue that whereas direct replication attempts are uncommon, conceptual replication attempts are common-providing an even better test of the validity of a phenomenon. We contend that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 49.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Patience
- Argument (complex analysis)
- Replication (statistics)
- Positive economics
- Phenomenon
- Epistemology
- Point (geometry)
- Field (mathematics)