Chapter 15
Building Confidence in (and Knowledge from) Experimental Results
Chapter 15 — Building Confidence in (and Knowledge from) Experimental Results A single finding is a data point. A body of reliable, replicated evidence is scientific knowledge. This chapter examines the post-study probability that a research finding is true, the role of priors, significance, and power in updating beliefs, and how the experimental approach—through selective data generation and replication—is uniquely positioned to build a cumulative stock of knowledge. It covers the spectrum of replication types (pure, same-population, similar-population, conceptual), pre-registration, registered reports, and pre-analysis plans as tools for promoting transparency and reducing publication bias.
- Scientific research aims to create a stock of knowledge. Optimally adding to this stock requires confidence in the received estimates to realize EP1.
- A key question concerning confidence revolves around the following query: After a research finding has been claimed, what is the post-study probability that it is true?
- Two unique features of the experimental approach situate it well to deepen the stock of scientific knowledge: selective data generation and the ability to enhance the notion, and role, of replications.
- Combining these two features, the analyst can maximize inferential power across the experimental spectrum and efficiently update knowledge.