The Seven Deadly Sins of Psychology: A Manifesto for Reforming the Culture of Scientific Practice

Cover
Princeton University Press, 16.07.2019 - 296 Seiten

Why psychology is in peril as a scientific discipline—and how to save it

Psychological science has made extraordinary discoveries about the human mind, but can we trust everything its practitioners are telling us? In recent years, it has become increasingly apparent that a lot of research in psychology is based on weak evidence, questionable practices, and sometimes even fraud. The Seven Deadly Sins of Psychology diagnoses the ills besetting the discipline today and proposes sensible, practical solutions to ensure that it remains a legitimate and reliable science in the years ahead. In this unflinchingly candid manifesto, Chris Chambers shows how practitioners are vulnerable to powerful biases that undercut the scientific method, how they routinely torture data until it produces outcomes that can be published in prestigious journals, and how studies are much less reliable than advertised. Left unchecked, these and other problems threaten the very future of psychology as a science—but help is here.

 

Inhalt

CHAPTER 1 THE SIN OF BIAS
1
CHAPTER 2 THE SIN OF HIDDEN FLEXIBILITY
22
CHAPTER 3 THE SIN OF UNRELIABILITY
46
CHAPTER 4 THE SIN OF DATA HOARDING
75
CHAPTER 5 THE SIN OF CORRUPTIBILITY
96
CHAPTER 6 THE SIN OF INTERNMENT
126
CHAPTER 7 THE SIN OF BEAN COUNTING
149
CHAPTER 8 REDEMPTION
171
Notes
219
Index
263
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Autoren-Profil (2019)

Chris Chambers is professor of cognitive neuroscience in the School of Psychology at Cardiff University.

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