2021
DOI: 10.1177/1745691620964106
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Putting the Self in Self-Correction: Findings From the Loss-of-Confidence Project

Abstract: Science is often perceived to be a self-correcting enterprise. In principle, the assessment of scientific claims is supposed to proceed in a cumulative fashion, with the reigning theories of the day progressively approximating truth more accurately over time. In practice, however, cumulative self-correction tends to proceed less efficiently than one might naively suppose. Far from evaluating new evidence dispassionately and infallibly, individual scientists often cling stubbornly to prior findings. Here we exp… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Our findings suggest that researchers’ hesitation toward self-correction (e.g. Fetterman and Sassenberg, 2015 ; Frewer et al, 2003 ; Rohrer et al, 2021 ; van der Bles et al, 2020 ) seems unwarranted: there is no harm in openly admitting doubts and regarding one’s findings as preliminary or in intending to reform one’s work routines. On the contrary, researchers who portray their findings as fixed and definite and who are unwilling to implement reforms are perceived as less trustworthy and less credible by laypeople.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our findings suggest that researchers’ hesitation toward self-correction (e.g. Fetterman and Sassenberg, 2015 ; Frewer et al, 2003 ; Rohrer et al, 2021 ; van der Bles et al, 2020 ) seems unwarranted: there is no harm in openly admitting doubts and regarding one’s findings as preliminary or in intending to reform one’s work routines. On the contrary, researchers who portray their findings as fixed and definite and who are unwilling to implement reforms are perceived as less trustworthy and less credible by laypeople.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…However, empirical findings suggest that the ever-doubtful and self-correcting scientist is an ideal and that, when it comes to admitting flaws and failures, researchers behave just as “normal” people do: they hesitate to do so for the sake of protecting their self-image and their reputation ( Bishop, 2018 ; Fetterman and Sassenberg, 2015 ; Rohrer et al, 2021 ; van der Bles et al, 2020 ). Thus, the question is whether these concerns are justified.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Editors at The Lancet and The 5 Such culture change seems to be starting in some fields: the "loss-of-confidence" project focuses on self-correction efforts (including but not limited to retraction) from empirical reports of novel findings in psychology; they say "even the 13 submissions we ultimately received could be considered a clear success and a testament to the current introspection and self-critical climate in psychology." (Rohrer et al, 2021). 6 This is referred to as "Retractedandrepublished" in the PubMed XML help (U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2021).…”
Section: Formats and Types Of Retractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And individuals are certainly part of it and should therefore shoulder some of the responsibility, as has been argued previously (Ritchie, 2020;Yarkoni, 2018). This could take the form of more modest initial claims, as well as more routine engagement with public self-correction of previously published work (Rohrer et al, 2021). A hopeful note, which may provide some motivation for a modest approach, would be that real change can only occur when many small steps are taken at many different levels.…”
Section: Genuine Dangers With Embracing Modestymentioning
confidence: 99%