Replication Crisis: Difference between revisions
Created page with "== Question == Is the replication crisis worst in psychology or medicine? == Sources == https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26315443/" |
m Updated page with AI-generated answer [automated edit by WikleBot] |
||
(10 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
''Written by AI. Help improve this answer by adding to the sources section. When the sources section is updated this article will regenerate.'' | |||
'''Short answer''' | |||
Quantitatively, psychology shows the lowest large-scale replication rate that has actually been measured (about one-third of tested findings replicated) [1]. Medicine (especially biomedicine) certainly suffers from fraud and non-reproducible results, but the available evidence is more fragmentary; there is no single field-wide replication study of comparable scope. Consequently, most commentators accept that the replication crisis is currently ''better documented''—and appears numerically worse—in psychology, while agreeing that certain sub-fields of medicine (e.g., Alzheimer’s research) may harbour equally serious problems. | |||
'''What the main sources say''' | |||
* The Open Science Collaboration’s 2015 project replicated 100 high-profile psychology papers and reproduced only 36 % of the original significant results [1]. | |||
* The “Unsafe Science” analysis argues that, once publication bias is taken into account, roughly 75 % of psychology claims are likely false, framing psychology as “ground zero” of the crisis [2]. | |||
* Michael Inzlicht’s 2024 essay focuses on stereotype-threat research; he concludes that the effect is “less robust than believed,” but stresses that some psychological constructs do survive replication attempts, suggesting the situation is “serious yet salvageable” [4]. | |||
* In medicine, the 2025 New York Times op-ed chronicles alleged data fabrication in Alzheimer’s amyloid-beta studies, contending that years of drug-development resources were misdirected as a result [3]. | |||
* Vox’s 2024 feature gathers estimates that fraudulent or irreproducible biomedical findings contribute to treatment delays and avoidable deaths, but offers no systematic replication percentage comparable to the psychology figure [5]. | |||
'''Are the views consistent?''' | |||
They converge on the claim that both fields have serious reliability issues, but differ in emphasis. Sources [1], [2], and [4] document psychology’s low replication rates. Sources [3] and [5] argue that medicine’s stakes are higher (patient harm, billions in costs) even if the ''measured'' replication failure rate is not yet pinned down. No source provides evidence that medicine as a whole replicates worse than psychology; rather, the claim is that its failures are more consequential. | |||
'''Factors that make psychology look worse''' | |||
* Abundant field-wide audits (e.g., 2015 Science project) produce hard numbers [1]. | |||
* Experiments are often small-sample, low-power, and easier to redo quickly, revealing problems faster [2]. | |||
* Publication incentives once favoured surprising results; the discipline now publicly tracks corrections and retractions [4]. | |||
'''Factors that obscure medicine’s true rate''' | |||
* Clinical trials are costlier and take years, so systematic replications are rare. | |||
* Regulatory oversight (FDA, EMA, etc.) enforces certain standards, potentially boosting replicability, but also concentrates efforts on late-stage trials that may hide earlier basic-science flaws [5]. | |||
* High-profile fraud cases (e.g., Alzheimer’s amyloid imaging) attract media coverage without providing denominator data for the field at large [3]. | |||
'''Public discourse timeline''' | |||
2011–2014 Psychology begins adopting preregistration and open-data norms following several high-profile failed replications (not detailed in current sources). | |||
2015 Publication of the Open Science Collaboration study quantifies the problem in psychology (36 % replication rate) [1]. | |||
2017–2020 Replication efforts expand to economics, social priming, and some biomedical niches; no medicine-wide project yet. | |||
2024 Michael Inzlicht’s pre-print calls for a “reckoning” but also reform optimism in social psychology [4]. | |||
Vox article publicises the human toll of biomedical fraud, pushing the crisis narrative beyond psychology [5]. | |||
2025 New York Times op-ed links alleged image manipulation in landmark Alzheimer’s studies to stalled drug development, intensifying concern inside medicine [3]. | |||
'''Bottom line''' | |||
With systematic audits showing only ~35 % replication success, psychology presently exhibits the ''clearest and worst-documented'' replication crisis. Medicine’s crisis is better described as ''potentially'' just as serious, but still less quantified; notable fraud cases and the high cost of irreproducibility keep the issue in the spotlight. Future large-scale replication projects in clinical and pre-clinical medicine will be needed before a definitive comparison is possible. | |||
== Sources == | |||
# [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26315443/ Estimating the Reproducibility of Psychological Science – ''Science''] (2015 peer-reviewed replication study) | |||
# [https://unsafescience.substack.com/p/75-of-psychology-claims-are-false ~75 % of Psychology Claims Are False – ''Unsafe Science'' (Substack)] (Opinion / Replication-crisis analysis) | |||
# [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/24/opinion/alzheimers-fraud-cure.html The Long Shadow of Fraud in Alzheimer’s Research – ''The New York Times''] (2025 Opinion / Op-Ed) | |||
# [https://www.thewikle.com/resources/Revisiting_Stereotype_Threat_-_by_Michael_Inzlicht.pdf Revisiting Stereotype Threat: A Reckoning for Social Psychology – Michael Inzlicht] (2024 pre-print PDF; Scholarly essay) | |||
# [https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/368350/scientific-research-fraud-crime-jail-time The Staggering Death Toll of Scientific Lies – ''Vox''] (2024 explanatory / analysis article) | |||
== Question == | == Question == | ||
Is the replication crisis worst in psychology or medicine? | Is the replication crisis worst in psychology or medicine? | ||