
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Statistician, blogger, and author Andrew Gelman of Columbia University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the challenges facing psychologists and economists when using small samples. On the surface, finding statistically significant results in a small sample would seem to be extremely impressive and would make one even more confident that a larger sample would find even stronger evidence. Yet, larger samples often fail to lead to replication. Gelman discusses how this phenomenon is rooted in the incentives built into human nature and the publication process. The conversation closes with a general discussion of the nature of empirical work in the social sciences.
4.7
41574,157 ratings
Statistician, blogger, and author Andrew Gelman of Columbia University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the challenges facing psychologists and economists when using small samples. On the surface, finding statistically significant results in a small sample would seem to be extremely impressive and would make one even more confident that a larger sample would find even stronger evidence. Yet, larger samples often fail to lead to replication. Gelman discusses how this phenomenon is rooted in the incentives built into human nature and the publication process. The conversation closes with a general discussion of the nature of empirical work in the social sciences.
2,255 Listeners
1,782 Listeners
967 Listeners
77 Listeners
2,395 Listeners
375 Listeners
894 Listeners
477 Listeners
22 Listeners
31 Listeners
6,421 Listeners
129 Listeners
2,003 Listeners
726 Listeners
685 Listeners
426 Listeners
819 Listeners
8,721 Listeners
118 Listeners
146 Listeners
123 Listeners