The role of replication in psychological science

The replication or reproducibility crisis in psychological science has renewed attention to philosophical aspects of its methodology. I provide herein a new, functional account of the role of replication in a scientific discipline: to undercut the underdetermination of scientific hypotheses from dat...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal for philosophy of science 2021-03, Vol.11 (1), Article 23
1. Verfasser: Fletcher, Samuel C.
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description The replication or reproducibility crisis in psychological science has renewed attention to philosophical aspects of its methodology. I provide herein a new, functional account of the role of replication in a scientific discipline: to undercut the underdetermination of scientific hypotheses from data, typically by hypotheses that connect data with phenomena. These include hypotheses that concern sampling error, experimental control, and operationalization. How a scientific hypothesis could be underdetermined in one of these ways depends on a scientific discipline’s epistemic goals, theoretical development, material constraints, institutional context, and their interconnections. I illustrate how these apply to the case of psychological science. I then contrast this “bottom-up” account with “top-down” accounts, which assume that the role of replication in a particular science, such as psychology, must follow from a uniform role that it plays in science generally. Aside from avoiding unaddressed problems with top-down accounts, my bottom-up account also better explains the variability of importance of replication of various types across different scientific disciplines.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s13194-020-00329-2
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subjects Education
EPSA2019: Selected papers from the biennial conference in Geneva
Hypotheses
Paper in Philosophy of Science in Practice
Philosophy
Philosophy of Science
Psychology
Replication
Reproducibility
Sampling error
Science
title The role of replication in psychological science
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