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Do Peer Reviewers Prefer Significant Results?

An experiment on peer reviewers at a psychology conference suggests a positive result premium, which could drive publication bias.

Credit: lyf1/Shutterstock

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I’ve long been writing about problems in how science is communicated and published. One of the most well-known concerns in this context is publication bias — the tendency for results that confirm a hypothesis to get published more easily than those that don’t.

Publication bias has many contributing factors, but the peer review process is widely seen as a crucial driver. Peer reviewers, it is widely believed, tend to look more favorably on “positive” (i.e., statistically significant) results.

But is the reviewer preference for positive results really true? A recently published study suggests that the effect does exist, but that it’s not a huge effect.

Researchers Malte Elson, Markus Huff and Sonja Utz carried out a clever experiment to determine the impact of statistical significance on peer review evaluations. The authors were the organizers of a 2015 conference to which researchers submitted abstracts that were subject to peer review.

The ...

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