Reproducibility Project
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Reproducibility Project
The Reproducibility Project: Psychology was a Crowdsourced psychological science, crowdsourced collaboration of 270 contributing authors to repeat 100 published experimental and correlational psychological studies. This project was led by the Center for Open Science and its co-founder, Brian Nosek, who started the project in November 2011. The results of this collaboration were published in August 2015. Reproducibility is the ability to produce the same findings, using the same methodologies as the original work, but on a different dataset (for instance, collected from a different set of participants). The project has illustrated the growing problem of failed reproducibility in social science. This project has started a movement that has spread through the science world with the expanded testing of the reproducibility of published works. Results Brian Nosek of University of Virginia and colleagues sought out to replicate 100 different studies that all were published in 2008. The pr ...
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Crowdsourced Psychological Science
Crowdsourced science (not to be confused with citizen science, a subtype of crowdsourced science) refers to collaborative contributions of a large group of people to the different steps of the Scientific research, research process in science. In psychology, the nature and scope of the collaborations can vary in their application and in the benefits it offers. What is crowdsourcing? A complement to the traditional way of doing science Crowdsourcing is a collaborative sourcing model in which a large and diverse number of people or organizations can contribute to a common goal or project. First examples of crowdsourcing science can be found during the 19th century. A Yale University professor launched a call for open participation of citizens to maximize the number and diversity of observations he could get on the Leonids#1800s, Leonids of 1833 meteor storm phenomenon. Crowdsourced science has been set aside for a long time and has only recently gained popularity in science. Actually, ...
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