sciatrix: Alien cyborg woman Nebula glares up at the camera, jaw set. (determined)
sciatrix ([personal profile] sciatrix) wrote2019-01-21 10:37 am

Anyone with a lot of experience in social psychology lit?

This book I'm reading is giving me a lot of interesting thoughts, but I've also seen a lot of yelling about the replicability of social psychology results (like the marshmallow experiment) in the years since I've finished my bachelor's. Since I've more or less ignored the human psych literature except as it relates to my field, I'm a little bit at a loss when it comes to evaluating that research as a whole.

How much of the irreproducibility discussion undermines this body of work? How much smoke is there in that fire? Anyone know?
zenolalia: A lalafell wearing rabbit ears stares wistfully into the sunset, asking Yoshi-P when male viera will come back from the war. (Default)

[personal profile] zenolalia 2019-01-21 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Basically anything done before about 2000 needs to be checked from reproducibility and confounding factors.

Which is really unfortunate, because in a lot of ways the field is only about 110 years old and the first 90 of those years are as good as useless.

That said, anything in the post-2000 range is a little more trustworthy, as long as its research on the general population and not on various mentally ill groups.

Reliable, reproducible, non-confounded research on to social behaviours and underlying causes of those behaviours in autism, cluster-B PDs, and a host of other mental illnesses and neurotypes is extremely new, within the last 10 years in most cases.

It's also worth noting that a lot of the field is pretty dedicated to re-performing and re-analyzing these older, more widely accepted studies and figuring out the legitimate from the trash. Almost any major study (like the marshmallow study) from the "bad old days," has been re-created and re-analyzed to find out the confounders and the outliers already.

The real problem is that a lot of the methodologies developed and popularized in preceding generations of research in the field are themselves both biased and widely taught, because of course 2000-2010 was both extremely recent and a major upheaval in the field.

That said, as a research professional in a related field, you can probably trust your own judgement in the end. You'll get a quick sense for when confounders such as poverty, race, and trauma are ignored or suspiciously absent from the methodology.
siderea: (Default)

[personal profile] siderea 2019-01-21 09:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmmmmm, this sounds wildly optimistic to me - like, the replicability crisis didn't start until the late 00s, so, no, I wouldn't assume that research 2000-2010 is a-okay.

But it also sounds like you have information I don't? I don't know anything about a revolution in the study of what is classically called "psychopathology", i.e. "social behaviours and underlying causes of those behaviours in autism, cluster-B PDs, and a host of other mental illnesses and neurotypes". This is right on my turf, so I'm happy to do my homework. Can you throw me a search string or other pointer so I know what I'm looking for?
staranise: A star anise floating in a cup of mint tea (Default)

[personal profile] staranise 2019-01-22 12:04 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure anybody actually knows what's signal and what's noise. I'm interested in what you're reading, partly because I know better how to evaluate something when I know what it is.