why do these slides ring a bell... @drvinceknight have you spoken to me about this?
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Replying to @o_guest @drvinceknight
indeed, Vince could very well have mentioned this.
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Replying to @dimpase @drvinceknight
To be clear, I do have a compsci degree so I'm not completely removed from the definition of replication you use.
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But it's dramatically different to what we do in comp cog neurosci modelling.
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And turbo different to cogsci/psych of course. The replication crisis is about QRMs, p-hacking, lack of theory, etc.
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Replying to @o_guest @drvinceknight
it's also about pressure to publish - common to all sciences...
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Replying to @dimpase @drvinceknight
yes I actually wrote down my thoughts on what it ishttp://thewinnower.com/papers/4825-crisis-in-what-exactly …
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Replying to @o_guest @drvinceknight
p-hacking certainly happens in mathematics; one just "forgets" to prove something, referees don't notice, QED.
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Replying to @dimpase @drvinceknight
ok but that's not with p values, right? So I'm not sure if you can call it p hacking?
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Replying to @o_guest @drvinceknight
rigged statistical testing - sure, in OR one invents a bad algorithm, and pretends it works well (on cooked data).
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yeah I'd say it's definitely not p hacking but definitely on spectrum of QRPs and misconduct https://replicationindex.wordpress.com/2015/01/24/questionable-research-practices-definition-detect-and-recommendations-for-better-practices/ …
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