Discoverthe error barOpen Science and its Enemies. Part I: The p-circlers
Open Science and its Enemies. Part I: The p-circlers

Open Science and its Enemies. Part I: The p-circlers

Update: 2024-05-20
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There's no brain news this month, but i take this unique opportunity to provide the first of my three part critique of - some parts of - the Open Science movement. This episode focusses on p-circling & reverse p-hacking. These two pejorative terms describe situations where scientists who *don't like* a particular reported effect, then decide to search for things in the paper which can 'un-explain' it. The reverse p-hacker turns a significant effect into a non-significant, or un-interesting one. These reverse p-hackers selectively adjust their version of data analysis (or interpretation) to *remove* significant p-values.


it's the same thing as p-hacking. but backwards. & equally wrong.

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Open Science and its Enemies. Part I: The p-circlers

Open Science and its Enemies. Part I: The p-circlers

Dr Nick Holmes