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Property / last update
20 January 2023
Timestamp+2023-01-20T00:00:00Z
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Property / last update: 20 January 2023 / rank
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Property / maintained by: Mika Braginsky / rank
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Property / imports: Rdpack / rank
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Property / cites work: Sensitivity analysis for p-hacking in meta-analyses / rank
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0.0.1
Property / software version identifier: 0.0.1 / rank
 
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publication date: 21 June 2022
Timestamp+2022-06-21T00:00:00Z
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0.2.1
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publication date: 17 July 2023
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17 July 2023
Timestamp+2023-07-17T00:00:00Z
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Property / last update: 17 July 2023 / rank
 
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Property / maintained by: Peter Solymos / rank
 
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Property / description
 
Fits right-truncated meta-analysis (RTMA), a bias correction for the joint effects of p-hacking (i.e., manipulation of results within studies to obtain significant, positive estimates) and traditional publication bias (i.e., the selective publication of studies with significant, positive results) in meta-analyses [see Mathur MB (2022). "Sensitivity analysis for p-hacking in meta-analyses." <doi:10.31219/osf.io/ezjsx>.]. Unlike publication bias alone, p-hacking that favors significant, positive results (termed "affirmative") can distort the distribution of affirmative results. To bias-correct results from affirmative studies would require strong assumptions on the exact nature of p-hacking. In contrast, joint p-hacking and publication bias do not distort the distribution of published nonaffirmative results when there is stringent p-hacking (e.g., investigators who hack always eventually obtain an affirmative result) or when there is stringent publication bias (e.g., nonaffirmative results from hacked studies are never published). This means that any published nonaffirmative results are from unhacked studies. Under these assumptions, RTMA involves analyzing only the published nonaffirmative results to essentially impute the full underlying distribution of all results prior to selection due to p-hacking and/or publication bias. The package also provides diagnostic plots described in Mathur (2022).
Property / description: Fits right-truncated meta-analysis (RTMA), a bias correction for the joint effects of p-hacking (i.e., manipulation of results within studies to obtain significant, positive estimates) and traditional publication bias (i.e., the selective publication of studies with significant, positive results) in meta-analyses [see Mathur MB (2022). "Sensitivity analysis for p-hacking in meta-analyses." <doi:10.31219/osf.io/ezjsx>.]. Unlike publication bias alone, p-hacking that favors significant, positive results (termed "affirmative") can distort the distribution of affirmative results. To bias-correct results from affirmative studies would require strong assumptions on the exact nature of p-hacking. In contrast, joint p-hacking and publication bias do not distort the distribution of published nonaffirmative results when there is stringent p-hacking (e.g., investigators who hack always eventually obtain an affirmative result) or when there is stringent publication bias (e.g., nonaffirmative results from hacked studies are never published). This means that any published nonaffirmative results are from unhacked studies. Under these assumptions, RTMA involves analyzing only the published nonaffirmative results to essentially impute the full underlying distribution of all results prior to selection due to p-hacking and/or publication bias. The package also provides diagnostic plots described in Mathur (2022). / rank
 
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Property / author: Maya Mathur / rank
 
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Property / author: Mika Braginsky / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: MIT license / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: File License / rank
 
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Property / imports: rstantools / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Sensitivity analysis for p-hacking in meta-analyses / rank
 
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Property / MaRDI profile type: MaRDI software profile / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 19:55, 12 March 2024

Sensitivity Analysis for p-Hacking in Meta-Analyses
Language Label Description Also known as
English
phacking
Sensitivity Analysis for p-Hacking in Meta-Analyses

    Statements

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    0.1.0
    20 January 2023
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    0.0.1
    21 June 2022
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    0.2.1
    17 July 2023
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    17 July 2023
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    Fits right-truncated meta-analysis (RTMA), a bias correction for the joint effects of p-hacking (i.e., manipulation of results within studies to obtain significant, positive estimates) and traditional publication bias (i.e., the selective publication of studies with significant, positive results) in meta-analyses [see Mathur MB (2022). "Sensitivity analysis for p-hacking in meta-analyses." <doi:10.31219/osf.io/ezjsx>.]. Unlike publication bias alone, p-hacking that favors significant, positive results (termed "affirmative") can distort the distribution of affirmative results. To bias-correct results from affirmative studies would require strong assumptions on the exact nature of p-hacking. In contrast, joint p-hacking and publication bias do not distort the distribution of published nonaffirmative results when there is stringent p-hacking (e.g., investigators who hack always eventually obtain an affirmative result) or when there is stringent publication bias (e.g., nonaffirmative results from hacked studies are never published). This means that any published nonaffirmative results are from unhacked studies. Under these assumptions, RTMA involves analyzing only the published nonaffirmative results to essentially impute the full underlying distribution of all results prior to selection due to p-hacking and/or publication bias. The package also provides diagnostic plots described in Mathur (2022).
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