84: A GPS in the Garden of Forking Paths (with Amy Orben)
Everything Hertz21 Touko 2019

84: A GPS in the Garden of Forking Paths (with Amy Orben)

We chat with Amy Orben, who applies "multiverse" methodology to combat and expose analytical flexibility in her research area of the impact of digital technologies on psychological wellbeing. We also discuss ReproducibiliTea, an early career researcher-led journal club initiative she co-founded, which helps young researchers create local open science groups. Here are some more details and links: * The tweet (https://twitter.com/_vdeni_/status/1126485212337143808) pointing our Dan's gramatical error in his usual introduction. THANKS DENIS * Is Twitter melting our brains? * The history of "new technology" panic * What's the next panic? * Moral entrepreneurs: profiting from moral panic * Specification curve analysis (https://socialsciences.nature.com/users/200472-amy-orben/posts/42763-beyond-cherry-picking): a way to run all theoretically defensible analysis options on a given dataset * Amy's Nature Human Behavior paper (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-018-0506-1) * Amy's PNAS paper (https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2019/04/30/1902058116) * The longitudincal effect of social media use on life satisfaction * How should scientists speak out against dodgy science? * The story behind Reproducabilitea * The ReproducibiliTea podcast (https://soundcloud.com/reproducibilitea) * ReproducibiliTea stickers (https://twitter.com/OrbenAmy/status/1125712657334571008)! * The UK Reproducibility network (https://www.bristol.ac.uk/psychology/research/ukrn/about/) * Daniel Lakens' Coursera course (https://www.coursera.org/learn/statistical-inferences) * A multiverse of multiverses (https://osf.io/9qke2/) * Press releasing every paper might not be the best idea * Amy's book recommendation: The long way to a small angry planet (https://www.amazon.com/Long-Small-Angry-Planet-Wayfarers/dp/0062444131 https://www.amazon.com/Long-Small-Angry-Planet-Wayfarers/dp/0062444131) Other links - Amy on Twitter (https://twitter.com/OrbenAmy) - Dan on twitter (www.twitter.com/dsquintana) - James on twitter (www.twitter.com/jamesheathers) - Everything Hertz on twitter (www.twitter.com/hertzpodcast) - Everything Hertz on Facebook (www.facebook.com/everythinghertzpodcast/) Music credits: Lee Rosevere (freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/) Support us on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/hertzpodcast) and get bonus stuff! $1 a month or more: Monthly newsletter + Access to behind-the-scenes photos & video via the Patreon app + the the warm feeling you're supporting the show $5 a month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus mini episode every month (extras + the bits we couldn't include in our regular episodes) Episode citation and permanent link Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2019, May 21) "A GPS in the Garden of Forking Paths (with Amy Orben)", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], doi: 10.17605/OSF.IO/38KPE (https://osf.io/38kpe/) Special Guest: Amy Orben.

Jaksot(195)

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179: Discovery vs. maintenance

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178: Alerting researchers about retractions

178: Alerting researchers about retractions

Dan and James discuss the Retractobot service, which emails authors about papers they've cited that have been retracted. What should authors do if they discover a paper they've cited has been retracte...

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177: Plagiarism

177: Plagiarism

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176: Tracking academic workloads

176: Tracking academic workloads

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175: Defending against the scientific dark arts

175: Defending against the scientific dark arts

We chat about a recent blogpost from Dorothy Bishop, in which she proposes a Master course that will provide training in fraud detection—what should such a course specifically teach and where would th...

7 Joulu 202338min

174: Smug missionaries with test tubes

174: Smug missionaries with test tubes

James proposes proposes a new type of consortium paper that could provide collaborative opportunities for researchers from countries that are underrepresented in published research papers. We also tal...

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173: How do science journalists evaluate psychology papers?

173: How do science journalists evaluate psychology papers?

Dan and James discuss a recent paper that investigated how science journalists evaluate psychology papers. To answer this question, the researchers presented science journalists with fictitious psycho...

1 Loka 202335min

172: In defence of the discussion section

172: In defence of the discussion section

Dan and James discuss a recent proposal to do away with discussion sections and suggest other stuff they'd like to get rid of from academic publishing. Links * The paper (https://doi.org/10.1007/s1122...

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