Footprint of publication selection bias on meta‐analyses in medicine, environmental sciences, psychology, and economics

Author:

Bartoš František12ORCID,Maier Maximilian3ORCID,Wagenmakers Eric‐Jan1ORCID,Nippold Franziska4,Doucouliagos Hristos5ORCID,Ioannidis John P. A.678910ORCID,Otte Willem M.11ORCID,Sladekova Martina12ORCID,Deresssa Teshome K.13ORCID,Bruns Stephan B.61314ORCID,Fanelli Daniele1516ORCID,Stanley T. D.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Methods University of Amsterdam Amsterdam Netherlands

2. Institute of Computer Science Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czech Republic

3. Department of Experimental Psychology University College London London UK

4. Department of Psychology University of Amsterdam Amsterdam Netherlands

5. Department of Economics Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

6. Meta‐Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS) Stanford California USA

7. Department of Epidemiology and Population Health Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

8. Stanford Prevention Research Center, Department of Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

9. Department of Biomedical Data Science Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

10. Department of Statistics Stanford University School of Humanities and Sciences Stanford California USA

11. Department of Pediatric Neurology UMC Utrecht Brain Center, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht University Utrecht Netherlands

12. School of Psychology University of Sussex Sussex UK

13. Centre for Environmental Sciences Hasselt University Hasselt Belgium

14. Department of Economics University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

15. Department of Methodology London School of Economics and Political Science London UK

16. Doctoral Centre, School of Social Sciences Heriot‐Watt University Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractPublication selection bias undermines the systematic accumulation of evidence. To assess the extent of this problem, we survey over 68,000 meta‐analyses containing over 700,000 effect size estimates from medicine (67,386/597,699), environmental sciences (199/12,707), psychology (605/23,563), and economics (327/91,421). Our results indicate that meta‐analyses in economics are the most severely contaminated by publication selection bias, closely followed by meta‐analyses in environmental sciences and psychology, whereas meta‐analyses in medicine are contaminated the least. After adjusting for publication selection bias, the median probability of the presence of an effect decreased from 99.9% to 29.7% in economics, from 98.9% to 55.7% in psychology, from 99.8% to 70.7% in environmental sciences, and from 38.0% to 29.7% in medicine. The median absolute effect sizes (in terms of standardized mean differences) decreased from d = 0.20 to d = 0.07 in economics, from d = 0.37 to d = 0.26 in psychology, from d = 0.62 to d = 0.43 in environmental sciences, and from d = 0.24 to d = 0.13 in medicine.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds UGent

Publisher

Wiley

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