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posted by martyb on Friday January 22 2016, @10:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the nothing-to-see-here dept.

Paul Meehl is responsible for what is probably the most apt explanation for why some areas of science have made more progress than others over the last 70 years or so. Amazingly, he pointed this out in 1967 and it had seemingly no effect on standard practices:

Because physical theories typically predict numerical values, an improvement in ex-perimental precision reduces the tolerance range and hence increases corroborability. In most psychological research, improved power of a statistical design leads to a prior probability approaching ½ of finding a significant difference in the theoretically predicted direction. Hence the corroboration yielded by "success" is very weak, and becomes weaker with increased precision. "Statistical significance" plays a logical role in psychology precisely the reverse of its role in physics. This problem is worsened by certain unhealthy tendencies prevalent among psychologists, such as a premium placed on experimental "cuteness" and a free reliance upon ad hoc explanations to avoid refuation.

Meehl, Paul E. (1967). "Theory-Testing in Psychology and Physics: A Methodological Paradox" (PDF). Philosophy of Science 34 (2): 103–115.
https://dx.doi.org/10.1086%2F288135 . Free here: http://cerco.ups-tlse.fr/pdf0609/Meehl_1967.pdf

There are many science articles posted to this site that fall foul of his critique probably because researchers are not aware of it. In short, this (putatively fatally flawed) research attempts to disprove a null hypothesis rather than a research hypothesis. Videos of some of his lectures are available online:
http://www.psych.umn.edu/meehlvideos.php

Session 7 starting at ~1hr is especially good.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 23 2016, @02:59AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 23 2016, @02:59AM (#293462)

    I'd say Fishers statistical philosophy was anti-inverse-probability, in whatever that form happened to take at the time.

    In that paper he disagrees:

    "Now suppose there were knowledge a priori... Then the method of Bayes... would supersede the fiducial value...if there were knowledge a priori, the fiducial method of reasoning would be clearly erroneous because it would have ignored some of the data. I need give no stronger reason than that."

    Obviously check it yourself to see I'm not doing some selective citing. Of course, that is irrelevant to the issue brought up by Meehl which is much more important. However, if you can back some of your claims about Fisher with citations I would be interested.