The replication crisis has led to positive structural, procedural, and community changes.
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Type
Change log
Authors
Abstract
The emergence of large-scale replication projects yielding successful rates substantially lower than expected caused the behavioural, cognitive, and social sciences to experience a so-called 'replication crisis'. In this Perspective, we reframe this 'crisis' through the lens of a credibility revolution, focusing on positive structural, procedural and community-driven changes. Second, we outline a path to expand ongoing advances and improvements. The credibility revolution has been an impetus to several substantive changes which will have a positive, long-term impact on our research environment.
Description
Acknowledgements: We want to thank Ali H. Al-Hoorie for his contribution with reference formatting and commenting on the manuscript, and Sriraj Aiyer, Crystal Steltenpohl, Maarten Derksen, Rinske Vermeij, and Esther Plomp for the comments provided on an earlier version of the manuscript. No funding has been received for this work.
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2731-9121

