Are Small Effects the Indispensable Foundation for a Cumulative Psychological Science? A Reply to Götz et al. (2022)

Author:

Primbs Maximilian A.1ORCID,Pennington Charlotte R.23ORCID,Lakens Daniël4ORCID,Silan Miguel Alejandro A.567ORCID,Lieck Dwayne S. N.8ORCID,Forscher Patrick S.9ORCID,Buchanan Erin M.10ORCID,Westwood Samuel J.11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University

2. School of Psychology, Aston University

3. Institute of Health and Neurodevelopment, Aston University

4. Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences, School of Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology

5. Annecy Behavioral Science Lab, Menthon-Saint-Bernard, France

6. Development, Individual, Process, Handicap, and Education Research Unit, Université Lumière Lyon 2

7. Social and Political Psychology Research Lab, University of the Philippines Diliman

8. Independent Researcher

9. Research and Innovation Division, Busara Center for Behavioral Economics, Nairobi, Kenya

10. Analytics, Harrisburg University of Science and Technology

11. Department of Psychology, School of Social Science, University of Westminster

Abstract

In the January 2022 issue of Perspectives, Götz et al. argued that small effects are “the indispensable foundation for a cumulative psychological science.” They supported their argument by claiming that (a) psychology, like genetics, consists of complex phenomena explained by additive small effects; (b) psychological-research culture rewards large effects, which means small effects are being ignored; and (c) small effects become meaningful at scale and over time. We rebut these claims with three objections: First, the analogy between genetics and psychology is misleading; second, p values are the main currency for publication in psychology, meaning that any biases in the literature are (currently) caused by pressure to publish statistically significant results and not large effects; and third, claims regarding small effects as important and consequential must be supported by empirical evidence or, at least, a falsifiable line of reasoning. If accepted uncritically, we believe the arguments of Götz et al. could be used as a blanket justification for the importance of any and all “small” effects, thereby undermining best practices in effect-size interpretation. We end with guidance on evaluating effect sizes in relative, not absolute, terms.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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