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Publikasjonsbias×Problemet med multippel testing×
FagfeltForskningsstatistikkForskningsstatistikk
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Opprinnelsesår19791935
OpphavspersonRobert RosenthalCarlo Bonferroni; Benjamini & Hochberg
TypeConceptConcept
Opprinnelig kildeRosenthal, R. (1979). The file drawer problem and tolerance for null results. Psychological Bulletin, 86(3), 638–641. DOI ↗Bonferroni, C. E. (1935). Il calcolo dei coefficienti di correlazione nel caso di variabilità di gruppi. Instituto Italiano di Statistica. link ↗
Aliasfile drawer problem, selective reporting, outcome reporting bias, funnel plot asymmetrymultiple testing, family-wise error, p-value adjustment, false discovery rate
Relaterte44
SammendragPublication bias occurs when the results of a study influence whether the study is published. Typically, studies with statistically significant or positive results are more likely to be published than studies with non-significant or negative results, even if both are scientifically valid. This bias distorts the published literature, making treatments appear more effective than they actually are. Rosenthal (1979) termed this the 'file drawer problem': research with null results sits in file drawers, unpublished, creating a biased sample of published evidence. Funnel plots and statistical tests (e.g., Egger test) can detect asymmetry suggesting publication bias; meta-analyses must account for this bias.When conducting multiple statistical tests, the probability of obtaining at least one false positive by chance increases with the number of tests. The multiple comparisons problem (also called the multiplicity problem) occurs because if you conduct 100 hypothesis tests at α = 0.05, you expect ~5 false positives by chance alone, even if all null hypotheses are true. Correction methods—Bonferroni, Benjamini-Hochberg false discovery rate (FDR), and others—adjust the significance threshold or p-values to control error rates. This concept is critical for research integrity and has profound implications for exploratory science.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Publication Bias · Multiple Comparisons Problem. Hentet 2026-06-17 fra https://scholargate.app/no/compare