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Forced curves and questionable trends.

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Explain xkcd is a wiki dedicated to explaining the webcomic xkcd. Go figure.
Forced curves and questionable trends.

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Psychology's reproducibility problem
Psychologyâs replication crisis: where it began, and where weâre going. [Replication Series #8]
The case for, and against, redefining "statistical significance."
A brief introduction on how statistics works (or doesnât). [Replication Series #7]
Next week the Guardian will be closing the Science Blog Network. We take a final look at the journey psychology has made toward becoming a robust and mature science
A short overview of the crisis in psychology, and what the field is doing to rise against it. [Replication Series #6]
Concerning everything, think twice.

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The scientist couldn't have foreseen the crisis his research would touch off.
The original study was named âFeeling the Futureâ (Bem, 2011). Eventually, with the original debunked, psychologists wrote âCorrecting the Pastâ (Galak et al., 2012). [Replication Series #5]
The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology is reviewing a controversial study after a backlash from scientists and LGBTQ advocates.
Itâs one thing to get findings - itâs another thing altogether to conclude too much from too little. [Replication Series #4.2]
Scientists worried that facial recognition software could be used to detect sexual orientation. Their efforts to raise an alarm caused an uproar.
Computers donât lie - people can. [Replication Series #4.1]