SCORE study reveals analytical variability in social sciences

An experiment in the DARPA-funded SCORE megaproyecto gave the same data to 457 analysts to reanalyze 100 published studies, revealing that only 34% reproduced the original statistical result precisely.

The SCORE megaproyecto aims to assess the credibility of social and behavioral sciences. In one experiment, presented this Wednesday in Nature, identical datasets and research questions were given to independent researchers. The findings underscore “analytical variability,” stemming from methodological choices such as data cleaning or statistical models.

Among the 504 reanalyses, 74% reached the same general conclusion as the originals, 24% were inconclusive, and 2% opposite. “Each analysis involves methodological decisions that can influence results,” said Guiomar Niso from the Centro de Neurociencias Cajal (CNC-CSIC). Lead researcher Balázs Aczél noted that the findings do not undermine prior research but highlight the need to acknowledge empirical uncertainty.

SCORE also examined reproducibility and replicability. Only 24% of articles shared data publicly; when available, 74% reproduced approximately and 54% precisely. In replications with new data, just 49% succeeded, with smaller effect sizes.

“Research is difficult, and the hard work starts after a discovery,” summed up Tim Errington from the Center for Open Science (COS). The authors advocate for greater transparency to bolster trust in science.

Связанные статьи

Child struggling with math errors, brain scan overlay revealing weaker activity in adaptation regions, Stanford study illustration.
Изображение, созданное ИИ

Stanford study links some children’s math struggles to difficulty learning from mistakes

Сообщено ИИ Изображение, созданное ИИ Проверено фактами

A Stanford-led study suggests that some children who struggle in math may have trouble adjusting their approach after errors during number-comparison tasks, rather than having only a core difficulty with numbers. Using brain imaging and computational modeling, researchers reported weaker activity in brain regions involved in monitoring performance and adapting behavior, patterns that also helped predict which children were more likely to struggle.

A study led by Universidad Diego Portales shows that 79% of Chileans are interested in scientific topics, but inequalities persist by income, age, and gender. While 92% of households earning over $1.5 million express high interest, this drops to 75% for those under $500,000. The findings underscore the need to bridge gaps in access to scientific knowledge.

Сообщено ИИ

A new book by bioethicist Daphne O. Martschenko and sociologist Sam Trejo explores the implications of polygenic scores in genetic testing, highlighting potential inequalities and myths surrounding genetics. Through their 'adversarial collaboration,' the authors debate whether such research can promote equity or entrench social divides. They call for stricter regulation to ensure responsible use.

A new report from watchdog group Open the Books reveals that U.S. universities are allocating up to 70% of federal science grants to administrative overhead, including DEI programs. This practice has inflated taxpayer costs and created incentives for low-quality research. The Trump administration's push to cap these rates at 15% faces legal challenges from university groups.

Сообщено ИИ

A new research paper demonstrates that large language models can identify real identities behind anonymous online usernames with high accuracy. The method, costing as little as $4 per person, analyzes posts for clues and cross-references them across the internet. Researchers from ETH Zurich, Anthropic, and MATS warn of reduced online privacy.

This Monday, the results of the Prueba de Acceso a la Educación Superior (PAES) for the 2026 Admission were released, showing a general increase in the averages of the obligatory tests by 10 points, from 610 to 620. All evaluations rose except for Sciences, which fell from 487 to 473. Additionally, there were 2,861 national scores, nearly a thousand more than the previous year.

Сообщено ИИ

The 2025 South African Reconciliation Barometer reveals that public attitudes towards the government of national unity have stayed largely the same. Confidence in political leaders and institutions continues to be low, with poverty and inequality as persistent concerns. The South African Broadcasting Corporation emerges as the most trusted public institution.

 

 

 

Этот сайт использует куки

Мы используем куки для анализа, чтобы улучшить наш сайт. Прочитайте нашу политику конфиденциальности для дополнительной информации.
Отклонить