Measuring transparency in the social sciences: political science and international relations

Author:

Scoggins Bermond12ORCID,Robertson Matthew P.13

Affiliation:

1. School of Politics and International Relations, Australian National University , Canberra, Australia

2. School of Social Sciences, Monash University , Melbourne, Australia

3. Department of Social Data Science, University of Mannheim , Mannheim, Germany

Abstract

The scientific method is predicated on transparency—yet the pace at which transparent research practices are being adopted by the scientific community is slow. The replication crisis in psychology showed that published findings employing statistical inference are threatened by undetected errors, data manipulation and data falsification. To mitigate these problems and bolster research credibility, open data and preregistration practices have gained traction in the natural and social sciences. However, the extent of their adoption in different disciplines is unknown. We introduce computational procedures to identify the transparency of a research field using large-scale text analysis and machine learning classifiers. Using political science and international relations as an illustrative case, we examine 93 931 articles across the top 160 political science and international relations journals between 2010 and 2021. We find that approximately 21% of all statistical inference papers have open data and 5% of all experiments are preregistered. Despite this shortfall, the example of leading journals in the field shows that change is feasible and can be effected quickly.

Funder

Australian Government

Publisher

The Royal Society

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