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While direct replications such as the “Many Labs” project are extremely valuable in testing the reliability of published findings across laboratories, they reflect the common reliance in psychology on single vignettes or stimuli, which limits the scope of the conclusions that can be reached. New experimental tools and statistical techniques make it easier to routinely sample stimuli, and to appropriately treat them as random factors. We encourage researchers to get into the habit of including multiple versions of the content (e.g., stimuli or vignettes) in their designs, to increase confidence in cross-stimulus generalization and to yield more realistic estimates of effect size. We call on editors to be aware of the challenges inherent in such stimulus sampling, to expect and tolerate unexplained variability in observed effect size between stimuli, and to encourage stimulus sampling instead of the deceptively cleaner picture offered by the current reliance on single stimuli.
Hogrefe Publishing Group
Benoît Monin
Daniel M. Oppenheimer
Melissa J. Ferguson
Travis J. Carter
Ran R. Hassin
Richard J. Crisp
Eleanor Miles
Shenel Husnu
Norbert Schwarz
Fritz Strack
Richard A. Klein
Kate A. Ratliff
Michelangelo Vianello
Reginald B. Adams
Štěpán Bahník
Michael J. Bernstein
Konrad Bocian
Mark J. Brandt
Beach Brooks
Claudia Chloe Brumbaugh
Zeynep Cemalcilar
Jesse Chandler
Winnee Cheong
William E. Davis
Thierry Devos
Matthew Eisner
Natalia Frankowska
David Furrow
Elisa Maria Galliani
Fred Hasselman
Joshua A. Hicks
James F. Hovermale
S. Jane Hunt
Jeffrey R. Huntsinger
Hans IJzerman
Melissa-Sue John
Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba
Heather Barry Kappes
Lacy E. Krueger
Jaime Kurtz
Carmel A. Levitan
Robyn K. Mallett
Wendy L. Morris
Anthony J. Nelson
Jason A. Nier
Grant Packard
Ronaldo Pilati
Abraham M. Rutchick
Kathleen Schmidt
Jeanine L. Skorinko
Robert Smith
Troy G. Steiner
Justin Storbeck
Lyn M. Van Swol
Donna Thompson
A. E. van ‘t Veer
Leigh Ann Vaughn
Marek Vranka
Aaron L. Wichman
Julie A. Woodzicka
Brian A. Nosek
Daniel Kahneman
Title: Commentaries and Rejoinder on
Description:
While direct replications such as the “Many Labs” project are extremely valuable in testing the reliability of published findings across laboratories, they reflect the common reliance in psychology on single vignettes or stimuli, which limits the scope of the conclusions that can be reached.
New experimental tools and statistical techniques make it easier to routinely sample stimuli, and to appropriately treat them as random factors.
We encourage researchers to get into the habit of including multiple versions of the content (e.
g.
, stimuli or vignettes) in their designs, to increase confidence in cross-stimulus generalization and to yield more realistic estimates of effect size.
We call on editors to be aware of the challenges inherent in such stimulus sampling, to expect and tolerate unexplained variability in observed effect size between stimuli, and to encourage stimulus sampling instead of the deceptively cleaner picture offered by the current reliance on single stimuli.
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