Search results for "effect sizes"

showing 1 items of 1 documents

Limited Usefulness of Capture Procedure and Capture Percentage for Evaluating Reproducibility in Psychological Science

2018

In psychological science, there is an increasing concern regarding the reproducibility of scientific findings. For instance, Replication Project: Psychology (Open Science Collaboration, 2015) found that the proportion of successful replication in psychology was 41%. This proportion was calculated based on Cumming and Maillardet’s (2006) widely employed capture procedure (CPro) and capture percentage (CPer). Despite the popularity of CPro and CPer, we believe that using them may lead to an incorrect conclusion of (a) successful replication when the population effect sizes in the original and replicated studies are different; and (b) unsuccessful replication when the population effect sizes i…

ReproducibilityOpen sciencePsychological science05 social scienceslcsh:BF1-990050401 social sciences methodssimulationPopularitycapture percentage050105 experimental psychologycapture procedurelcsh:Psychology0504 sociologySample size determinationReplication (statistics)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPopulation effectPsychologyreproducibilityGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologyeffect sizesFrontiers in Psychology
researchProduct