
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Brian Nosek of the University of Virginia talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about how incentives in academic life create a tension between truth-seeking and professional advancement. Nosek argues that these incentives create a subconscious bias toward making research decisions in favor of novel results that may not be true, particularly in empirical and experimental work in the social sciences. In the second half of the conversation, Nosek details some practical innovations occurring in the field of psychology, to replicate established results and to publicize unpublished results that are not sufficiently exciting to merit publication but that nevertheless advance understanding and knowledge. These include the Open Science Framework and PsychFileDrawer.
By Russ Roberts4.7
42124,212 ratings
Brian Nosek of the University of Virginia talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about how incentives in academic life create a tension between truth-seeking and professional advancement. Nosek argues that these incentives create a subconscious bias toward making research decisions in favor of novel results that may not be true, particularly in empirical and experimental work in the social sciences. In the second half of the conversation, Nosek details some practical innovations occurring in the field of psychology, to replicate established results and to publicize unpublished results that are not sufficiently exciting to merit publication but that nevertheless advance understanding and knowledge. These include the Open Science Framework and PsychFileDrawer.

26,326 Listeners

2,462 Listeners

2,280 Listeners

377 Listeners

1,521 Listeners

78 Listeners

984 Listeners

480 Listeners

23 Listeners

6,621 Listeners

132 Listeners

2,018 Listeners

31 Listeners

739 Listeners

579 Listeners

3,349 Listeners

707 Listeners

532 Listeners

8,766 Listeners

155 Listeners

1,087 Listeners