We’re a volunteer group aiming to document and quantify the replication crisis in the social and behavioural sciences. You can see our initial output here. We plan to expand greatly this year.
Replications are essential to accumulate knowledge and accelerate scientific progress. Despite their relevance, replication studies are under-used and undercited, leading to a biased view of the scientific literature. To address this issue and promote the broader use of replication studies in research, education, and policy, we propose to (1) create and maintain a comprehensive database that catalogs replication efforts across various fields; (2) develop two user-friendly Shiny apps for finding, exploring, and visualizing replication data, enabling field-specific meta-scientific analyses; and (3) conduct outreach to encourage contributions to the database, test the apps, and teach researchers, educators, and policymakers how to best engage with our developed resources.
You can see our crowdsourced doc here and a presentation of the future of our project here. We recently expanded this into a proper machine-readable dataset and did double-entry, extracting raw stats for 1319 experiments (paper forthcoming). We are also partnering with ReD to make this the largest collection of replication studies in the world (~7000).
Train coders to add and validate entries to our database
Conduct online events (hackathons) that incentivize replication entries in disciplines that are missing in our database
Program the educational Shiny app, democratizing access to our database and results
Conduct training sessions for the general public
Maintain and curate a user-friendly platform that is accessible to the public
Conduct research on the moderators and causes of successful replications
Sustain the FORRT community and its educational programmes
An array of early career researchers, mostly psychology professors, postdocs, or PhD candidates.
Flavio Azevedo (asst. prof at Groningen), Helena Hartmann (postdoc at University Hospital Essen), Lukas Röseler, Lukas Wallrich, Max Korbmacher, Gavin Leech, Rían O Mahoney (did half of the 1300 double checks on the current dataset), Mahmoud Elsherif, Bethan Illey… and many more.
We've received awards and commendations from SIPS (one of the main reform orgs in psychology), JISC, NASA, HiddenREF, and the UKRN. We were also finalists for the Einstein Foundation Early Career Award.
We are not likely to fail in the modest goal (of collating more and merging efforts). But downstream problems (people not using the database, a rearguard action waiting us out, waiting for the crisis to blow over as it has before) are quite likely.
None. (Staff are salaried elsewhere but not for this work.)