Copy

[DATE UPDATE] HKU seminar Dec 20, 16:30: 2nd phase results of mass pre-registered replications of classic JDM articles

Dear colleagues and friends,


[DATE UPDATE:
Due to a conflict with other events taking place at HKU social science, we had to change the date of the seminar presentation announced below to Dec 20th. Apologies. The JAMOVI/JASP workshop announced in a different email will still take place on Dec 6th morning as planned.

Materials will be available to all:
Also, for those who asked, I will ofcourse make materials from this presentation and the JAMOVI/JASP workshops available to those who can't attend. I'll send more on that after the two are concluded end of December.]


 

This email update is to let you know about a seminar I'll be giving at HKU psychology department about "Mass pre-registered replications of classic JDM findings in two HKU Courses: Second phase findings":

Updated poster link: https://www.psychology.hku.hk/uploads/seminar/20181220_Dr_Gilad_Feldman.pdf
Date/Time: 4:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.│December 20, 2018 (Thursday)
Venue: Rm 813, 8/F, Jockey Club Tower, Centennial Campus, University of Hong Kong 

Abstract:
This is the second semester we are running the mass pre-registered replication effort to revisit classic findings in Judgment and Decision making (JDM). We concluded 18 pre-registered replications led by undergraduate students in two HKU courses: PSYC3052 Advanced Social Psychology in which we discuss recent developments in psychological science to promote the “credibility revolution” addressing the so-called “replication/reproducibility crisis”, and a new course PSYC2071 Judgment and Decision Making that challenges students to revisit and reexamine classic JDM phenomena, design extensions, and apply those to every-day life. In both courses, undergraduate students analyzed impactful JDM classics and attempted to reproduce methods and materials to conduct effect-size calculations and power analyses, design Qualtrics experiments, and adopt latest tools and templates in preregistering replications on the Open Science Framework. We then ran the experiments on well-powered Amazon Mechanical Turk American online samples (power = 0.95-0.99; N = 400-1050). Students wrote submission-ready manuscripts of their findings with very comprehensive supplementary materials, to be shared with the academic community together with all procedures, materials, datasets, and code on the Open Science Framework, in the spirit of full transparency and open-science. Combined with guided thesis students, the mass pre-registered replication effort project at HKU this past year has so far resulted in ~40 student replications, summarized in http://mgto.org/pre-registered-replications/ . In this talk I will briefly present the process, findings, main insights, and my own take-aways, and invite collaborators to join us in next phase of this project.


No need to register, come if you like.
Feel free to pass this along to others in your labs and departments.



Best regards,
 
--
Gilad Feldman (Fili)
Department of Psychology
University of Hong Kong
 
Website | Researchgate | Google Scholar | Twitter

About this mailing list.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.






This email was sent to <<Email Address>>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
Gilad Feldman (HKU) · 6/22, Department of Psychology, University of Hong Kong · Pok Fu Lam road, HK island · Hong Kong · Hong Kong

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp