Abstract

Several influential publications have sensitized the community of behavioral scientists to the dangers of inflated effects and false-positive errors leading to the unwarranted publication of nonreplicable findings. This issue has been related to prominent cases of data fabrication and survey results pointing to bad practices in empirical science. Although we concur with the motives behind these critical arguments, we note that an isolated debate of false positives may itself be misleading and counter-productive. Instead, we argue that, given the current state of affairs in behavioral science, false negatives often constitute a more serious problem. Referring to Wason’s (1960) seminal work on inductive reasoning, we show that the failure to assertively generate and test alternative hypotheses can lead to dramatic theoretical mistakes, which cannot be corrected by any kind of rigor applied to statistical tests of the focal hypotheses. We conclude that a scientific culture rewarding strong inference (Platt, 1964) is more likely to see progress than a culture preoccupied with tightening its standards for the mere publication of original findings.

Keywords

False positive paradoxFalse positives and false negativesPsychologyTest (biology)InferenceStatistical hypothesis testingControl (management)Confirmation biasSocial psychologyEpistemologyEmpirical researchPositive economicsCognitive psychologyComputer scienceStatisticsArtificial intelligence

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Publication Info

Year
2012
Type
article
Volume
7
Issue
6
Pages
661-669
Citations
227
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

227
OpenAlex
5
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149
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Cite This

Klaus Fiedler, Florian Kutzner, Joachim I. Krueger (2012). The Long Way From α-Error Control to Validity Proper. Perspectives on Psychological Science , 7 (6) , 661-669. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691612462587

Identifiers

DOI
10.1177/1745691612462587
PMID
26168128

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%