Interesting to see that the Fetzer Franklin Fund, which commissioned an attempted replication of Dean Radin's double-slit studies, is also funding a multi-laboratory study of the decline effect, led by Jonathan Schooler and four other principal investigators:
https://www.fetzer-franklin-fund.org/pro...-effect-1/
The primary goals of the project seem to be directed as much towards investigating possible anomalous aspects of decline effects, as towards explaining them as the result of "questionable research practices":
1. To develop a gold standard for replication protocol, in which every effort is made to design experiments and implement replications in a manner that will maximize the likelihood of full replicability.
2. To examine whether the replications of newly devised experimental protocols are associated with declining effect sizes, even when all reasonable efforts are made to minimize such declines.
3. If declining effect sizes are still observed, to identify their possible locus by, for example, assessing whether other labs can replicate the findings as effectively as the originating lab.
The current status of the project will be presented next week at the Metascience 2019 Symposium at Stanford University (5-8 September).
https://www.fetzer-franklin-fund.org/pro...-effect-1/
The primary goals of the project seem to be directed as much towards investigating possible anomalous aspects of decline effects, as towards explaining them as the result of "questionable research practices":
1. To develop a gold standard for replication protocol, in which every effort is made to design experiments and implement replications in a manner that will maximize the likelihood of full replicability.
2. To examine whether the replications of newly devised experimental protocols are associated with declining effect sizes, even when all reasonable efforts are made to minimize such declines.
3. If declining effect sizes are still observed, to identify their possible locus by, for example, assessing whether other labs can replicate the findings as effectively as the originating lab.
The current status of the project will be presented next week at the Metascience 2019 Symposium at Stanford University (5-8 September).