tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post7173556977698702360..comments2024-03-29T11:00:11.612+01:00Comments on The 20% Statistician: Checking your Stats, and Some Errors we MakeDaniel Lakenshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18143834258497875354noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-59534306141050925502021-02-03T15:01:10.668+01:002021-02-03T15:01:10.668+01:00This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.vikashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16803802010991708225noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-46372099254803420952021-02-03T15:00:08.671+01:002021-02-03T15:00:08.671+01:00This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.vikashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16803802010991708225noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-76432171892750400452016-12-30T11:03:40.367+01:002016-12-30T11:03:40.367+01:00just for future readers, you can check your papers...just for future readers, you can check your papers online now too here http://statcheck.io/Andyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11577850626697107552noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-5630572416321136352016-10-18T11:53:41.258+02:002016-10-18T11:53:41.258+02:00APA style research paper writing is a professional...APA style research paper writing is a professional style of writing. It may also be referred to as a particular standard format that is followed for writing academic and research papers. See more <a href="http://www.financehomework.net/our-finance-assignment-help/statistics-homework-help/" rel="nofollow">statistics homework help</a><br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14447550912257112248noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-26769989008132807112015-11-22T11:55:57.352+01:002015-11-22T11:55:57.352+01:00No, not yet, but people are working on extending i...No, not yet, but people are working on extending it, and this sounds like a logical future extension.Daniel Lakenshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18143834258497875354noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-26826113367910308872015-11-22T07:00:24.181+01:002015-11-22T07:00:24.181+01:00Hi Daniel, does this work with non-parametric anal...Hi Daniel, does this work with non-parametric analyses and post-hoc corrected data? Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-74711075023928221202015-11-07T14:40:28.209+01:002015-11-07T14:40:28.209+01:00This is great, thanks!
You wrote that it works wi...This is great, thanks!<br /><br />You wrote that it works with correlations, but that seems not to be the case, the few PDFs I've tried.<br /><br />It worked with most papers I've tried but APA papers like the JEPs and Emotion did not work for me. It seems the equal signs are coded as underscores or blankspaces in those papers. It can to some extent be fixed manually by "search and replace-function" in the text editor, I guess.<br /><br />Great help for checking errors in one's own manuscripts, nevertheless!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-90731767520897590292015-11-02T16:16:09.355+01:002015-11-02T16:16:09.355+01:00Hi, I'm not a Mac user - I would contact Miche...Hi, I'm not a Mac user - I would contact Michele Nuijten, and ask her for help. If you get it to work, make a set of screenshots like I did, send it to Michele, and help out your fellow Mac users! Daniel Lakenshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18143834258497875354noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-24772609115517680362015-11-02T16:03:22.764+01:002015-11-02T16:03:22.764+01:00This is fantastic! I have shared it with my profes...This is fantastic! I have shared it with my professor, Jay Van Bavel, and we've shared it with the whole lab. We are making it a policy to run this program before submitting any manuscript. I suspect this may become common practice in our field in short order.<br /><br />One question. I am on a Mac, and I have noticed that the instructions for adding xpdf to the path are geared for Windows users. I'm therefore at a loss as to how to install the script on my machine! Would you mind providing a little guidance about how to get the script set up for Mac users? (I suspect this will be useful to more than me, given the prevalence of Mac users in the field!)<br /><br />Thanks!<br /><br />Daniel Yudkin<br />Advanced Doctoral Candidate in Social Psychology, New York University<br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02235131462896778790noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-31349225904910410552015-10-29T15:03:34.122+01:002015-10-29T15:03:34.122+01:00> Felix, I think the idea of fully automized st...> Felix, I think the idea of fully automized statistics checks using p-checker is a worthwhile blog to write!<br /><br />Absolutely! Actually, it's remarkably easy, extending your code snippet:<br /><br />------<br />library(statcheck)<br /><br /># This is a retracted paper<br />download.file(url="http://www.communicationcache.com/uploads/1/0/8/8/10887248/money_and_mimicry-when_being_mimicked_makes_people_feel_threatened.pdf", destfile="check.pdf", method="curl")<br /><br />report <- checkPDF("check.pdf")<br />report<br /><br /># Transfer report to p-checker<br />browseURL(paste("http://shinyapps.org/apps/p-checker/?syntax=", paste(levels(report$Raw), collapse="\n")))<br />------<br /><br />Users should be aware, however, that R-index, p-curve, etc. only need the focal hypothesis tests, while statcheck extracts all test statistics.<br /><br />Furthermore, I realized that statcheck failed on many PDFs I tried. At the end, we probably cannot avoid some hand-coding.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06337624413052823518noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-63516157099533778862015-10-29T14:24:19.683+01:002015-10-29T14:24:19.683+01:00Excellent recommendation! Originally I wanted to s...Excellent recommendation! Originally I wanted to show how to export the automatically retrieved test statistics to a txt file, and then plug it in to p-checker, but the post was getting too long. So let's correct it in the comments for the die-hard reader! The code:<br /><br />report<-checkPDF("C:/Users/Daniel/OneDrive/Data/statcheck/Zhang2015.pdf")<br />report<br />write(levels(report$Raw), file = "report.txt")<br /><br />will save the statcheck analysis, and write the identified test statistics to a txt file (report.txt). You can just open the txt file and copy paste the test statistics in p-checker, and get a p-curve analyses, TIVA and other tests for publication bias, etc. <br /><br />Felix, I think the idea of fully automized statistics checks using p-checker is a worthwhile blog to write!<br />Daniel Lakenshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18143834258497875354noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-987850932434001559.post-61688051307462854202015-10-29T14:19:20.474+01:002015-10-29T14:19:20.474+01:00Nice post! I agree - I also discovered errors in m...Nice post! I agree - I also discovered errors in my own manuscripts when checking them (at least, before I started to use knitr).<br /><br />For people who want to check their own manuscript and are less amazed by the idea of installing several command line tools (or even never started R): They can type the relevant test statistics into the p-checker app: http://shinyapps.org/apps/p-checker/<br /><br />This is a bit more manual work, but probably easier for many. (And you get additional indices of evidential value as a free add-on!).Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06337624413052823518noreply@blogger.com