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Review
. 2011 Mar;6(2):163-71.
doi: 10.1177/1745691611400237.

Voodoo Correlations Are Everywhere-Not Only in Neuroscience

Affiliations
Review

Voodoo Correlations Are Everywhere-Not Only in Neuroscience

Klaus Fiedler. Perspect Psychol Sci. 2011 Mar.

Abstract

A recent set of articles in Perspectives on Psychological Science discussed inflated correlations between brain measures and behavioral criteria when measurement points (voxels) are deliberately selected to maximize criterion correlations (the target article was Vul, Harris, Winkielman, & Pashler, 2009). However, closer inspection reveals that this problem is only a special symptom of a broader methodological problem that characterizes all paradigmatic research, not just neuroscience. Researchers not only select voxels to inflate effect size, they also select stimuli, task settings, favorable boundary conditions, dependent variables and independent variables, treatment levels, moderators, mediators, and multiple parameter settings in such a way that empirical phenomena become maximally visible and stable. In general, paradigms can be understood as conventional setups for producing idealized, inflated effects. Although the feasibility of representative designs is restricted, a viable remedy lies in a reorientation of paradigmatic research from the visibility of strong effect sizes to genuine validity and scientific scrutiny.

Keywords: file drawer; paradigmatic research; representative design; sampling filters.

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