伪科学
复制(统计)
心理学
社会心理学
心理信息
价值(数学)
认知心理学
应用心理学
梅德林
替代医学
医学
计算机科学
机器学习
病理
病毒学
法学
政治学
作者
Alex McDiarmid,Alexa M. Tullett,Cassie M. Whitt,Simine Vazire,Paul E. Smaldino,Jeremy E. Stephens
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41562-021-01220-7
摘要
Self-correction-a key feature distinguishing science from pseudoscience-requires that scientists update their beliefs in light of new evidence. However, people are often reluctant to change their beliefs. We examined belief updating in action by tracking research psychologists' beliefs in psychological effects before and after the completion of four large-scale replication projects. We found that psychologists did update their beliefs; they updated as much as they predicted they would, but not as much as our Bayesian model suggests they should if they trust the results. We found no evidence that psychologists became more critical of replications when it would have preserved their pre-existing beliefs. We also found no evidence that personal investment or lack of expertise discouraged belief updating, but people higher on intellectual humility updated their beliefs slightly more. Overall, our results suggest that replication studies can contribute to self-correction within psychology, but psychologists may underweight their evidentiary value.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI