Mass Reproducibility and Replicability: A New Hope

246 Pages Posted: 11 Apr 2024

See all articles by Abel Brodeur

Abel Brodeur

IZA Institute of Labor Economics; University of Ottawa - Department of Economics

Derek Mikola

Carleton University

Nikolai Cook

Wilfrid Laurier University - School of Business & Economics

Abstract

This study pushes our understanding of research reliability by reproducing and replicating claims from 110 papers in leading economic and political science journals. The analysis involves computational reproducibility checks and robustness assessments. It reveals several patterns. First, we uncover a high rate of fully computationally reproducible results (over 85%). Second, excluding minor issues like missing packages or broken pathways, we uncover coding errors for about 25% of studies, with some studies containing multiple errors. Third, we test the robustness of the results to 5,511 re-analyses. We find a robustness reproducibility of about 70%. Robustness reproducibility rates are relatively higher for re-analyses that introduce new data and lower for re-analyses that change the sample or the definition of the dependent variable. Fourth, 52% of re-analysis effect size estimates are smaller than the original published estimates and the average statistical significance of a re-analysis is 77% of the original. Lastly, we rely on six teams of researchers working independently to answer eight additional research questions on the determinants of robustness reproducibility. Most teams find a negative relationship between replicators' experience and reproducibility, while finding no relationship between reproducibility and the provision of intermediate or even raw data combined with the necessary cleaning codes.

Keywords: reproduction, replication, research transparency, open science, economics, political science

JEL Classification: B41, C10, C81

Suggested Citation

Brodeur, Abel and Brodeur, Abel and Mikola, Derek and Cook, Nikolai, Mass Reproducibility and Replicability: A New Hope. IZA Discussion Paper No. 16912, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4790780 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4790780

Abel Brodeur (Contact Author)

IZA Institute of Labor Economics ( email )

P.O. Box 7240
Bonn, D-53072
Germany

University of Ottawa - Department of Economics ( email )

200 Wilbrod Street
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://https://sites.google.com/site/abelbrodeur/

Derek Mikola

Carleton University

1125 colonel By Drive
Ottawa, K1S 5B6
Canada

Nikolai Cook

Wilfrid Laurier University - School of Business & Economics ( email )

Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5
Canada

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