Evidence that nonsignificant results are sometimes preferred: Reverse P-hacking or selective reporting?

Chuard, Pierre J. C. and Vrtílek, Milan and Head, Megan L. and Jennions, Michael D. (2019) Evidence that nonsignificant results are sometimes preferred: Reverse P-hacking or selective reporting? PLOS Biology, 17 (1). e3000127. ISSN 1545-7885

[thumbnail of file_id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.3000127&type=printable] Text
file_id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.3000127&type=printable - Published Version

Download (622kB)

Abstract

There is increased concern about poor scientific practices arising from an excessive focus on P-values. Two particularly worrisome practices are selective reporting of significant results and ‘P-hacking’. The latter is the manipulation of data collection, usage, or analyses to obtain statistically significant outcomes. Here, we introduce the novel, to our knowledge, concepts of selective reporting of nonsignificant results and ‘reverse P-hacking’ whereby researchers ensure that tests produce a nonsignificant result. We test whether these practices occur in experiments in which researchers randomly assign subjects to treatment and control groups to minimise differences in confounding variables that might affect the focal outcome. By chance alone, 5% of tests for a group difference in confounding variables should yield a significant result (P < 0.05). If researchers less often report significant findings and/or reverse P-hack to avoid significant outcomes that undermine the ethos that experimental and control groups only differ with respect to actively manipulated variables, we expect significant results from tests for group differences to be under-represented in the literature. We surveyed the behavioural ecology literature and found significantly more nonsignificant P-values reported for tests of group differences in potentially confounding variables than the expected 95% (P = 0.005; N = 250 studies). This novel, to our knowledge, publication bias could result from selective reporting of nonsignificant results and/or from reverse P-hacking. We encourage others to test for a bias toward publishing nonsignificant results in the equivalent context in their own research discipline.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: OA STM Library > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@oastmlibrary.com
Date Deposited: 06 Jan 2023 12:04
Last Modified: 26 Apr 2024 13:21
URI: http://geographical.openscholararchive.com/id/eprint/5

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item