Not All Effects Are Indispensable: Psychological Science Requires Verifiable Lines of Reasoning for Whether an Effect Matters

Author:

Anvari Farid1ORCID,Kievit Rogier2,Lakens Daniël3ORCID,Pennington Charlotte R.4,Przybylski Andrew K.5ORCID,Tiokhin Leo3ORCID,Wiernik Brenton M.6ORCID,Orben Amy7

Affiliation:

1. Social and Economic Cognition III, Social Cognition Center Cologne, Department of Psychology, University of Cologne

2. Cognitive Neuroscience Department, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Medical Center

3. Human Technology Interaction Group, Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology

4. School of Psychology, College of Health & Life Sciences, Aston University

5. Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford

6. Department of Psychology, University of South Florida

7. MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge

Abstract

To help move researchers away from heuristically dismissing “small” effects as unimportant, recent articles have revisited arguments to defend why seemingly small effect sizes in psychological science matter. One argument is based on the idea that an observed effect size may increase in impact when generalized to a new context because of processes of accumulation over time or application to large populations. However, the field is now in danger of heuristically accepting all effects as potentially important. We aim to encourage researchers to think thoroughly about the various mechanisms that may both amplify and counteract the importance of an observed effect size. Researchers should draw on the multiple amplifying and counteracting mechanisms that are likely to simultaneously apply to the effect when that effect is being generalized to a new and likely more dynamic context. In this way, researchers should aim to transparently provide verifiable lines of reasoning to justify their claims about an effect’s importance or unimportance. This transparency can help move psychological science toward a more rigorous assessment of when psychological findings matter for the contexts that researchers want to generalize to.

Funder

Huo Family Foundation

H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

Radboud Universitair Medisch Centrum

Economic and Social Research Council

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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