youknowme
Whatever you want me to be.
Poor practice is catching up with science,1-3 manifesting in part in the failure of results to be reproducible and replicable.4-7 Various causes have been posited,1, 8 but we believe that poor statistical education and practice are symptoms of and contributors to problems in science as a whole.
The problem is one of cargo-cult statistics – the ritualistic miming of statistics rather than conscientious practice. This has become the norm in many disciplines, reinforced and abetted by statistical education, statistical software, and editorial policies.
At the risk of oversimplifying a complex historical process, we think the strongest force pushing science (and statistics) in the wrong direction is existential: science has become a career, rather than a calling, while quality control mechanisms have not kept pace.9
Some, such as historian and sociologist of science Steven Shapin, still argue that science survives thanks to the ethical commitment of scientists,10 but others, such as philosopher of science Jerome Ravetz, find this a charitable perspective.11,12 Much of what is currently called “science” may be viewed as mechanical application of particular technologies, including statistical calculations,13 rather than adherence to shared moral norms.14, 15
We believe the root of the problem lies in the mid-twentieth century.
Significance magazine - Cargo-cult statistics and scientific crisis | Significance magazine
Here is the ASA's (American Statistical Association) statement on p-values:
https://amstat.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00031305.2016.1154108#.XFefHlVKiCh
Here is a very simple short video on the p-value to give you a basic idea what a p-value is:
Some consider science to be in a state of crisis and this in part due to the fact that they have been using the p-value in a way it was never meant to be used and to get published they push for "statistical significance" regardless of if it actually means anything worthwhile.
Think of all the studies you see in the news day in and day out: Do you really think science happens that fast? I see several people on these forums chucking statistics at each other, as if they are facts, and a few of them have even insisted that statistics are facts, so my question is: How much faith do you have in science?
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