An illusion of predictability in scientific results: Even experts confuse inferential uncertainty and outcome variability

Author:

Zhang Sam1ORCID,Heck Patrick R.2ORCID,Meyer Michelle N.3ORCID,Chabris Christopher F.3ORCID,Goldstein Daniel G.4ORCID,Hofman Jake M.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309

2. Office of Research, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Washington, DC 20552

3. Department of Bioethics & Decision Sciences, Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA 17822

4. Microsoft Research, New York, NY 10012

Abstract

Traditionally, scientists have placed more emphasis on communicating inferential uncertainty (i.e., the precision of statistical estimates) compared to outcome variability (i.e., the predictability of individual outcomes). Here, we show that this can lead to sizable misperceptions about the implications of scientific results. Specifically, we present three preregistered, randomized experiments where participants saw the same scientific findings visualized as showing only inferential uncertainty, only outcome variability, or both and answered questions about the size and importance of findings they were shown. Our results, composed of responses from medical professionals, professional data scientists, and tenure-track faculty, show that the prevalent form of visualizing only inferential uncertainty can lead to significant overestimates of treatment effects, even among highly trained experts. In contrast, we find that depicting both inferential uncertainty and outcome variability leads to more accurate perceptions of results while appearing to leave other subjective impressions of the results unchanged, on average.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference40 articles.

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