3/ Eg. most common: Pre-reg makes exploratory res impossible/harder/devaluates it. Every objection I've seen has convincingly been addressed
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Replying to @annemscheel
4/ multiple times by diff people in comments, blog posts, editorials. See eg. comments to above-mentioned article or http://www.russpoldrack.org/2016/09/why-preregistration-no-longer-makes-me.html …
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Replying to @annemscheel
5/ In Twitter/FB discussions it often seems to me as if sceptics either don't read these replies/explanations or just discard them.
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Replying to @annemscheel
6/ These are often just repetitions of same arg's or a form of bargaining where a sceptic poses increasingly specific/unlikely cases as args
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Replying to @annemscheel
7/ I'm puzzled why so many seem so reluctant to change their minds. What am I missing?
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Replying to @annemscheel
8/ What is so scary about "preregister everything" *in light of all myth debunking* that has taken place?
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Replying to @annemscheel
9/ Please tell me. I honestly want to see the other side. /end
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Replying to @o_guest
I disagree, but maybe you can elaborate. In my view, pre-reg is crucial for hypothesis testing, be it frequentist or Bayesian.
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Replying to @annemscheel
@Darren_Rhodes might enjoy going through it, I'm not actually against others doing preregistration. But I can't see me doing it2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
my modelling of cognition is more lakatosian imho than Bayesian anyway. Either way not sure I'd object if asked.
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