PRESENTATIONS
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- Carl Bergstrom: The inherent inefficiency of grant proposal competitions and the possible benefits of lotteries in allocating research funding
- Dorothy Bishop: The psychology of scientists: The role of cognitive biases in sustaining bad science
- Annette N. Brown: Is replication research the study of research or of researchers?
- Tim Errington: Barriers to conducting replications – challenges or opportunities?
- James Evans: The social limits of scientific certainty
- Daniele Fanelli: Low reproducibility as divergent information: A K-theory analysis of reproducibility studies
- Fiona Fidler: Misinterpretations of evidence, and worse misinter- pretations of evidence
- Jacob Foster: Made to Know: Science as the Social Production of Knowledge (and its Limits)
- Andrew Gelman: Embracing Variation and Accepting Uncertainty: Implications for Science and Metascience
- Steven Goodman: Statistical methods as social technologies versus analytic tools: Implications for metascience and research reform
- Zoltán Kekecs: How to produce credible research on anything
- Carole Lee: Gender-based homophily in collaborations across a heterogeneous scholarly landscape
- Edward Miguel: Innovations in Pre-registration in Economics
- Staša Milojević: The Changing Landscape of Knowledge Production
- Michèle Nuijten: Checking Robustness in 4 Steps
- Cailin O’Connor: Scientific Polarization
- Adam Russell: Fomenting (Reproducible) Revolutions: DARPA, Re- plication, and High-Risk, High-Payoff Research
- Marta Sales-Pardo: Collaboration patterns in science
- Melissa Schilling: Where do breakthrough ideas come from?
- Jonathan Schooler: How replicable can psychological science be?: A highly powered multi-site investigation of the robustness of newly discovered findings
- Dean Keith Simonton: Scientific Creativity: Discovery and Invention as Combinatorial
- Roberta Sinatra: Quantifying the evolution of scientific careers
- Paula Stephan: Practices and Attitudes Regarding Risky Research
- Simine Vazire: Towards a More Self-Correcting Science
- Bernhard Voekl: Biological variation is more than random noise
- Jan Walleczek: Counterfactual Meta-Experimentation and the Limits of Science: 100 Years of Parapsychology as a Control Group
- Shirley Wang: What does replicable ‘real world’ evidence from ‘real world’ data look like?
- Jevin West: Echo Chambers in Science?
- Yang Yang: The Replicability of Scientific Findings Using Human and Machine Intelligence
- Funder Panel: Review and Future Directions
- Panel Discussion: Reflections on metascience topics and findings
- Panel Discussion: Journalists’ perspective on metascience and engagement with the broader public