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Retrospective median power, false positive meta‐analysis and large‐scale replication

T. D. StanleyDeakin Lab for the Meta‐Analysis of Research (DeLMAR), School of Business and Law Deakin University Burwood Victoria AustraliaHristos DoucouliagosDepartment of Economics Deakin University Burwood Victoria AustraliaJohn P. A. IoannidisDepartment of Medicine, METRICS Stanford University Stanford California USA
2021en
ABI

Аннотация

Recent, high-profile, large-scale, preregistered failures to replicate uncover that many highly-regarded experiments are "false positives"; that is, statistically significant results of underlying null effects. Large surveys of research reveal that statistical power is often low and inadequate. When the research record includes selective reporting, publication bias and/or questionable research practices, conventional meta-analyses are also likely to be falsely positive. At the core of research credibility lies the relation of statistical power to the rate of false positives. This study finds that high (>50%-60%) median retrospective power (MRP) is associated with credible meta-analysis and large-scale, preregistered, multi-lab "successful" replications; that is, with replications that corroborate the effect in question. When median retrospective power is low (<50%), positive meta-analysis findings should be interpreted with great caution or discounted altogether.

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