status quoi? – part ii – Simine Vazire (sometimes i'm wrong)

Rhino9

i wanted to write a series of blog posts featuring a few of the people i've met who are challenging the conventional wisdom and inspiring others.  but instead of telling you what i think of them, i wanted to give them a chance to share their insights in their own words.  i contacted a few early career researchers i've had the chance to get to know who have impressed me, and who are not affiliated with me or my lab (though i am collaborating on group projects with some of them).  there are many more role models than those featured here, and i encourage you to join me in amplifying them and their messages, however you can. i asked each of these people "what are the blind spots in your field - what issues should we be tackling that we aren't paying enough attention to?"  here are their answers, in three parts, which i will post in three separate blog posts this week. find part i of the series here (with a longer introduction) Part II: Emma Henderson, Anne Israel, Ruben Arslan, and Hannah Moshontz Emma Henderson I feel safer than most to embrace open research because I’m not set on staying in academia. However my lack of trepidation is not the case for most ECRs: There’s a constant background radiation of work-based anxiety amongst those researchers who would, in an ideal world, be uncompromisingly bold in their choices. But they’re hampered by a “publish or perish” culture and a lack of sustainability and security in their jobs (if they have jobs in the first place). Continue reading

status quoi? – part i – Simine Vazire (sometimes i'm wrong)

Lion1 tired of lionization

"she's too old for breaking and too young to tame" -kris kistofferson, from the song sister sinead

the older i get the less i understand reverence of authority or eminence.  when i was a student, i assumed that those who rose to eminence must have some special wisdom - they often acted as if they did, and others seemed to hang on their every word, so i gave them the benefit of the doubt even if i couldn't see it.  now i'm pretty convinced that there's nothing to this.  some eminent people are wise, and some are full of shit.  just like everyone else. there are so many messages out there reinforcing the idea that high status people have so much wisdom to offer.  every time a conference stops all parallel programming for a famous person's keynote, every special issue with only invited submissions by senior people sharing their wisdom, every collection of intellectual leaders' opinions on random questions at The Edge - they all send this message. it's not that eminent people never have useful advice to give, or important experiences we can all learn from.  it's just that we should judge this on a case by case basis, rather than assuming it.  the knee-jerk assumption that eminent people should be listened to, detached from the actual value of what they're saying, is the problem.  if eminent people are just using their eminence to reinforce existing incentives and hierarchies (even if they do so in ways that seem benevolent and generous), rather than challenging them, then maybe we should listen to them less. Continue reading

Will this time be different? – Sanjay Srivastava (The Hardest Science)

I had the honor to deliver the closing address to the Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science on July 9, 2019 in Rotterdam. The following are my prepared remarks. (These remarks are also archived on PsyArXiv.) Some years ago, not long after people in psychology began talking in earnest about a replication crisis and what to do about it, I was talking with a colleague who has been around the field for longer than I have. He said to me, “Oh, this is all just cyclical. Psychology goes through a bout of self-flagellation every decade or two. It’ll be over soon and nothing will be different.” I can’t say I blame him. Psychology has had other periods of reform that have fizzled out. One of the more recent ones was the statistical reform effort of the late 20th century – and you should read Fiona Fidler’s history of it, because it is completely fascinating. Luminaries like Jacob Cohen, Paul Meehl, Robert Rosenthal, and others were members and advisors of a blue-ribbon APA task force to change the practice of statistics in psychology. This resulted in the APA style manual adding a requirement to report effect sizes – one which is occasionally even followed, though the accompanying call to interpret effect sizes has gotten much less traction – and a few other modest improvements. But it was nothing like the sea change that many of them believed was needed. Continue reading

flip yourself – part ii – Simine Vazire (sometimes i'm wrong)

Kangaroo2

  [for flip yourself - part i see here] we’ve recently seen a big push to make the scientific process more transparent. bringing this process out in the open can bring out the best in everyone – when we know our work will be seen by others, we’re more careful.  when others know they can check the work, they trust us more.  most of our focus has been on bringing transparency to how the research is done, but we also need transparency about how it’s evaluated – peer review has become a core part of the scientific process, and of how scientific claims get their credibility.  but peer review is far from transparent and accountable. we can help bring more transparency and accountability to peer review by ‘flipping’ ourselves.  just like journals can flip from closed (behind a paywall) to open (open access), we can flip our reviews by spending more of our time doing reviews that everyone can see. one way we can do this is through journals that offer open review, but we don’t need to limit ourselves to that.  thanks to preprint servers like PsyArXiv, authors can post manuscripts that anyone can access, and get feedback from anyone who takes the time to read and comment on their papers.  best of all, if the feedback is posted directly on the preprint (using a tool like hypothes. Continue reading

flip yourself – part i – Simine Vazire (sometimes i'm wrong)

Bison1 a bison who recently finished her editorial term.

my mom asked me a few months ago what i was going to do once i was no longer editor in chief of a journal.  she was worried about my well-being.  “you love being an editor,” she said.  when i told her i didn’t know, she said “could you just keep reading other people’s papers and sending them your comments?” it’s not the first time my mom’s innocent suggestion, preposterous on its face, turned out to be the answer. in high school when i wanted to quit the basketball team but both of us still wanted me to have an after school sport, my mom suggested i join the wrestling team.  after laughing at her for a day or two, i realized it was the perfect solution.  there are perks to having unconventional parents.* for the last few months i’ve been thinking about what i’ve learned from being an editor, what i loved about it, and what i didn’t love about it.  i loved the day to day work.  the intellectual challenge, and the challenge of using my power for good. Continue reading

Sexual Well-being and the Dark Triad – Scott McGreal (Unique—Like Everybody Else)

The so-called "dark triad" traits may have mixed effects for the quality of a person's sexual life

had i been editor in chief – Simine Vazire (sometimes i'm wrong)

 
i recently applied for the editor in chief position at Psychological Science.  i didn't get it, but i got far enough to be asked to write a vision statement, responding to eight prompts.  it was a fun exercise to think about what i would've liked to do had i been editor in chief of Psych Science, so i thought i'd share my vision statement here.  one of the main reasons i was very interested in this position is because Eric Eich and Steve Lindsay have done a great job, as editors in chief, of making the journal more and more credible as a source for interesting and rigorous psychological science.  i hope the journal keeps moving in this direction. this version has been lightly edited to fix some, but surely not all, typos. (in my defense, Srivastava is hard to spell.)  

VISION STATEMENT

  1. Overall Vision
What would be your overall vision for the journal? Continue reading

Sexual Satisfaction in BDSM – Scott McGreal (Unique—Like Everybody Else)

A study finds that people involved in BDSM have healthy sex lives, especially those in the dominant role.

Social Media (Probably) Isn’t Making You Stupid – Scott McGreal (Unique—Like Everybody Else)

Claims about social media making people dumber get the cart before the horse. Social media use can lead to either helpful or unproductive outcomes depending on how it is used.

What Makes a “Successful” Psychopath? – Scott McGreal (Unique—Like Everybody Else)

Being a psychopath may facilitate success in crime. High impulsivity may be an impairment in normal society but may contribute to criminal success through risk-taking.