Subjective evidence evaluation survey for many-analysts studies

Publication date

2024-07-01

Authors

Sarafoglou, Alexandra
Hoogeveen, SuzanneISNI 0000000485114735
van den Bergh, Don
Aczel, Balazs
Albers, Casper J.
Althoff, Tim
Botvinik-Nezer, Rotem
Busch, Niko A.
Cataldo, Andrea M.
Devezer, Berna

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Many-analysts studies explore how well an empirical claim withstands plausible alternative analyses of the same dataset by multiple, independent analysis teams. Conclusions from these studies typically rely on a single outcome metric (e.g. effect size) provided by each analysis team. Although informative about the range of plausible effects in a dataset, a single effect size from each team does not provide a complete, nuanced understanding of how analysis choices are related to the outcome. We used the Delphi consensus technique with input from 37 experts to develop an 18-item subjective evidence evaluation survey (SEES) to evaluate how each analysis team views the methodological appropriateness of the research design and the strength of evidence for the hypothesis. We illustrate the usefulness of the SEES in providing richer evidence assessment with pilot data from a previous many-analysts study.

Keywords

Crowdsourcing analysis, Metascience, Open science, Scientific transparency, Team science

Citation

Sarafoglou, A, Hoogeveen, S, van den Bergh, D, Aczel, B, Albers, C J, Althoff, T, Botvinik-Nezer, R, Busch, N A, Cataldo, A M, Devezer, B, van Dongen, N N N, Dreber, A, Fried, E I, Hoekstra, R, Hoffman, S, Holzmeister, F, Huber, J, Huntington-Klein, N, Ioannidis, J, Johannesson, M, Kirchler, M, Loken, E, Mangin, J-F, Matzke, D, Menkveld, A J, Nilsonne, G, van Ravenzwaaij, D, Schweinsberg, M, Schulz-Kuempel, H, Shanks, D R, Simons, D J, Spellman, B A, Stoevenbelt, A H, Szaszi, B, Truebutschek, D, Tuerlinckx, F, Uhlmann, E L, Vanpaemel, W, Wicherts, J & Wagenmakers, E-J 2024, 'Subjective evidence evaluation survey for many-analysts studies', Royal Society Open Science, vol. 11, no. 7, 240125. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.240125