Publication Bias in Psychology: A Diagnosis Based on the Correlation between Effect Size and Sample Size |
| |
Authors: | Anton Kühberger Astrid Fritz Thomas Scherndl |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.; 2. Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.; 3. Österreichisches Zentrum für Begabtenförderung und Begabungsforschung, Salzburg, Austria.; Université de Montréal, Canada, |
| |
Abstract: | BackgroundThe p value obtained from a significance test provides no information about the magnitude or importance of the underlying phenomenon. Therefore, additional reporting of effect size is often recommended. Effect sizes are theoretically independent from sample size. Yet this may not hold true empirically: non-independence could indicate publication bias.MethodsWe investigate whether effect size is independent from sample size in psychological research. We randomly sampled 1,000 psychological articles from all areas of psychological research. We extracted p values, effect sizes, and sample sizes of all empirical papers, and calculated the correlation between effect size and sample size, and investigated the distribution of p values.ResultsWe found a negative correlation of r = −.45 [95% CI: −.53; −.35] between effect size and sample size. In addition, we found an inordinately high number of p values just passing the boundary of significance. Additional data showed that neither implicit nor explicit power analysis could account for this pattern of findings.ConclusionThe negative correlation between effect size and samples size, and the biased distribution of p values indicate pervasive publication bias in the entire field of psychology. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|