Gelman et al.(2006) discuss a common statistical error where researchers treat differences between significant and non-significant results as significant. They describe a scenario where results from two independent studies report parameter estimates and standard errors of 25
Nieuwenhuis et al. (2011) analyzed 157 behavioral, systems, and cognitive neuroscience articles that relied on such analysis and were published in journals like Nature, Science, Neuron, and Journal of Neuroscience between 2009 and 2010. They found that roughly half (79) of the articles made this error. Further, they found that the error had serious consequences for the results for approximately two-thirds of the studies that made the error. To date, none of the studies that Nieuwenhuis et al. (2011) identified as problematic have been retracted. We assess whether the citation rate changes after the publication of Nieuwenhuis et al. (2011).
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Ken Cor and Gaurav Sood