Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile
Brian Nosek (@[email protected])

@briannosek

Developed the IAT, GNAT, and SPF. Co-founded Project Implicit, Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science, and the Center for Open Science.

ID: 531697681

linkhttps://cos.io/ calendar_today20-03-2012 22:32:06

14,14K Tweet

28,28K Followers

799 Following

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Center for Open Science celebrated its 10th anniversary with an event at the National Academies. We told the story of reforming the research culture toward openness, integrity, and reproducibility. This thread provides some highlights. 1/ cos.io/blog/cos-celeb…

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Daughter, age 9: I figured out how to make my live-forever machine. I’ll get jellyfish DNA and mix it w/chemicals... I’m going to test it on <bully at school>. Me: What if it works? Daughter: Ugh. I need a new plan. [A favorite from the memory box.]

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Center for Open Science has many users from the humanities, including historians, making their work more open. Also, check out the qualitative data repository: data.qdr.syr.edu

Anna Harvey (@annalilharvey) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NIH Acting Director Larry Tabak recently said, "We'll have to have the discipline to stop supporting underpowered boutique studies." We suggest spending that $$ instead on "master protocols” designed to produce reliable evidence about a smaller set of interventions ⬇️:

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The GoFundMe response has, right now, given us the freedom to make decisions about how to proceed in this case without worrying about how much our legal fees will accrue. We can pursue what's right instead of what’s most affordable."

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Condolences to Cal and Stanford's baseball, softball, and olympic sport student athletes who will lose multiple additional school days to cross-country travel demands. Being a student athlete is hard enough with regional travel demands. Sheesh.

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Imagine being head of recruiting for Stanford baseball. 64 games, 7 away weekends + the conference tournament. Thursday morning departure. Sunday night or Monday afternoon return. Better hope to get a bunch of Sat doubleheaders instead of F/S/S games gostanford.com/sports/basebal…

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Preregistered studies can & should be critiqued for how they present and interpret planned vs unplanned analyses. Non-preregistered studies can't & should be critiqued for how they present and interpret planned vs unplanned analyses. The 2nd is more common and less transparent.

Preregistered studies can &amp; should be critiqued for how they present and interpret planned vs unplanned analyses.

Non-preregistered studies can't &amp; should be critiqued for how they present and interpret planned vs unplanned analyses.

The 2nd is more common and less transparent.
Kirsten Morehouse (@kirst_morehouse) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Do you collect demographic info about your participants? Do you share open data? If so, check out this preprint w/ @BenedekKurdi & Brian Nosek (@[email protected]): osf.io/preprints/meta… We provide a pipeline for assessing & addressing re-identification risk (identifying subjects w/o direct ids) 1/

Do you collect demographic info about your participants? Do you share open data? If so, check out this preprint w/ @BenedekKurdi &amp; <a href="/BrianNosek/">Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de)</a>: osf.io/preprints/meta… We provide a pipeline for assessing &amp; addressing re-identification risk (identifying subjects w/o direct ids) 1/
Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

An important model posits two routes to persuasion. A peripheral route relies on superficial cues of credibility; a central route involves depth consideration of the reasons and evidence. The Gino arguments seem to bank on readers sticking with the peripheral route.

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This great New Yorker piece reveals Zoe as one of the early career researchers who identified problems in Gino's data and acted. If we want a more just research culture, those of us with position and power must stand and support those without it, in word and deed. Thank you Zoe

Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There is a remarkable difference in tone and insight about Gino and her work between a NYT piece that did not appear engage with any co-authors, and a New Yorker piece that did. NYT: nytimes.com/2023/09/30/bus… New Yorker: newyorker.com/magazine/2023/…

Zoé Ziani, Ph.D. (@zoeziani) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yes... I had to censor my work without which my committee wouldn't sign it... But the great thing with Internet is that you can post the original version and even add a disclaimer explaining why it differs from the published version…

Yes... I had to censor my work without which my committee wouldn't sign it... But the great thing with Internet is that you can post the original version and even add a disclaimer explaining why it differs from the published version…
Brian Nosek (@briannosek@nerdculture.de) (@briannosek) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Naturalistic experiment making the most of rigor and transparency with the Registered Report format plus open data, materials, and code. Congrats to Jordan (what is the statute of limitations for my taking credit for former lab members’ work?) & Aaron for leading a fine project.