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posted by janrinok on Thursday July 01 2021, @11:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the good-science-is-boring dept.

Social science papers that failed to replicate racked up 153 more citations, on average, than papers that replicated successfully.

This latest result is "pretty damning," says University of Maryland, College Park, cognitive scientist Michael Dougherty, who was not involved with the research. "Citation counts have long been treated as a proxy for research quality," he says, so the finding that less reliable research is cited more points to a "fundamental problem" with how such work is evaluated.

[...] University of California, San Diego, economists Marta Serra-Garcia and Uri Gneezy were interested in whether catchy research ideas would get more attention than mundane ones, even if they were less likely to be true. So they gathered data on 80 papers from three different projects that had tried to replicate important social science findings, with varying levels of success.

Citation counts on Google Scholar were significantly higher for the papers that failed to replicate, they report today in Science Advances, with an average boost of 16 extra citations per year. That's a big number, Serra-Garcia and Gneezy say—papers in high-impact journals in the same time period amassed a total of about 40 citations per year on average.

And when the researchers examined citations in papers published after the landmark replication projects, they found that the papers rarely acknowledged the failure to replicate, mentioning it only 12% of the time.

Well, nobody likes a Debbie Downer, do they?

Journal Reference:
Marta Serra-Garcia, Uri Gneezy. Nonreplicable publications are cited more than replicable ones [open], Science Advances (DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abd1705)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 01 2021, @02:56PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 01 2021, @02:56PM (#1151804)
    Its worse than that. We have people publishing papers citing other papers that have nothing to do with the subject. Nobody he ks the cotations. And 90% of ALL medical studies have replication failires. If you think the social sciences are bad, look at big pharma psychiatry studies. The DSM is a joke. It's safe to say now that psychiatry isn't a science.

    The approval of an alzheimers drug that has zero proof of working is just the latest. "We have to give people hope." You don't do that by fraud. But of course when hour paycht/bribe depends on it, you will justify anything. Just ask the Nazis - we were nust following orders.

    And its only with the discovery of mass graves of children that Canada is finally having to admit that it was straight-up genocide, not "only cultural genoct." Lying smug we're better than you fucks. (- an angry canadian)