Another preprint by Peter Bancel, entitled "Simulating Questionable Research Practices", has been uploaded to ResearchGate:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication..._Practices
The questionable practices considered include failure to respect the distinction between pilot and confirmatory studies, arbitrary exclusion of trials, optional stopping and extending, multiple analysis, publication bias and outright fraud. He concludes that these practices don't account for the evidence from Ganzfeld experiments, and also says the analysis suggests that they can't explain the heterogeneity of the data from micro-psychokinesis, potentially supporting the genuineness of the phenomenon.
Abstract:
Meta-analysis provides evidence for psi effects across a number of well-established protocols. However, the drawbacks of meta-analysis, which are well-known, can weaken the evidence, particularly for researchers in other disciplines who are not familiar with the parapsychological literature. Moreover, recent scrutiny on the variety and frequency of questionable research practices (Qrps)-methodological problems such as publication bias or unplanned analyses that can lead to spurious effects-has called into question meta-analytical evidence across many fields. A paper by Bierman, Spottiswoode and Bijl uses Monte Carlo simulation to test whether meta-analytic databases can be explained by Qrps alone. The paper is novel in that it attempts to simulate a comprehensive set of Qrps operating simultaneously. This work presents a reformulation of the problem that improves the power of Qrp tests and speeds up simulation times by a factor of roughly 1000. The method is applied to the Ganzfeld database. In addition, it is shown how understanding Qrps can lead to insights about other databases, namely those of micro-PK RNG and Global Consciousness Project (GCP) experiments. Specifically, it is shown that a broad set of Qrps fails to account for the Ganzfeld data, even if these are used in maximal combination and are adopted by researchers at frequencies approaching 100%. Applied to the micro-PK data, it is argued that, although the data are not amenable to full simulation, the Qrp analysis suggests that the heterogeneity cannot be explained by maximal Qrps. If substantiated, this conjecture would supply new support for a micro-PK psi effect and help clarify some of the confusion about this complex database. The GCP is fully pre-registered and hence generally immune to Qrps. Qrp analysis is consistent with this framing. It is indicated how the GCP, while exhibiting a real psi effect, does not provide evidence for its Global Consciousness hypothesis.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication..._Practices
The questionable practices considered include failure to respect the distinction between pilot and confirmatory studies, arbitrary exclusion of trials, optional stopping and extending, multiple analysis, publication bias and outright fraud. He concludes that these practices don't account for the evidence from Ganzfeld experiments, and also says the analysis suggests that they can't explain the heterogeneity of the data from micro-psychokinesis, potentially supporting the genuineness of the phenomenon.
Abstract:
Meta-analysis provides evidence for psi effects across a number of well-established protocols. However, the drawbacks of meta-analysis, which are well-known, can weaken the evidence, particularly for researchers in other disciplines who are not familiar with the parapsychological literature. Moreover, recent scrutiny on the variety and frequency of questionable research practices (Qrps)-methodological problems such as publication bias or unplanned analyses that can lead to spurious effects-has called into question meta-analytical evidence across many fields. A paper by Bierman, Spottiswoode and Bijl uses Monte Carlo simulation to test whether meta-analytic databases can be explained by Qrps alone. The paper is novel in that it attempts to simulate a comprehensive set of Qrps operating simultaneously. This work presents a reformulation of the problem that improves the power of Qrp tests and speeds up simulation times by a factor of roughly 1000. The method is applied to the Ganzfeld database. In addition, it is shown how understanding Qrps can lead to insights about other databases, namely those of micro-PK RNG and Global Consciousness Project (GCP) experiments. Specifically, it is shown that a broad set of Qrps fails to account for the Ganzfeld data, even if these are used in maximal combination and are adopted by researchers at frequencies approaching 100%. Applied to the micro-PK data, it is argued that, although the data are not amenable to full simulation, the Qrp analysis suggests that the heterogeneity cannot be explained by maximal Qrps. If substantiated, this conjecture would supply new support for a micro-PK psi effect and help clarify some of the confusion about this complex database. The GCP is fully pre-registered and hence generally immune to Qrps. Qrp analysis is consistent with this framing. It is indicated how the GCP, while exhibiting a real psi effect, does not provide evidence for its Global Consciousness hypothesis.