Abstract

The lack of replication of key effects in psychology has highlighted some fundamental problems with reporting of research findings and methods used (Asendorpf et al., 2013; Open Science Collaboration, 2015). Problems with replication have been attributed to sources of bias such as questionable research practices like HARK-ing (Kerr, 1998) or p-hacking (Simmons et al., 2011). Another potential source of bias is lack of precision in the conduct and methods used in psychological research, which likely introduces systematic error into data collected with the potential to affect results. A related issue is lack of accuracy in reporting study methods and findings. There is, therefore, increased recognition in the importance of transparency when reporting study outcomes to enable the scientific community to make fair, unbiased appraisals of the implications and worthiness of study findings. Lack of transparency hinders scientific progress as it may lead to erroneous conclusions regarding the implications of research findings, and may impede comparison and synthesis of findings across studies. As a result, researchers have become interested in research quality and the need for comprehensive, transparent reporting of findings (Asendorpf et al., 2013). This has resulted in calls for appropriate reporting standards and means to assess study quality (Cooper, 2011; Greenhalgh and Brown, 2017). In the present article we review the issue of study quality in psychology, and argue for valid and reliable means to assess study quality in psychology. Specifically, we contend that appropriate assessment checklists be developed for survey studies, given the prominence of surveys as a research method in the field.

Highlights

  • The lack of replication of key effects in psychology has highlighted some fundamental problems with reporting of research findings and methods used (Asendorpf et al, 2013; Open Science Collaboration, 2015)

  • In the present article we review the issue of study quality in psychology, and argue for valid and reliable means to assess study quality in psychology

  • To illustrate the longstanding problems resulting from the absence of a fit-for-purpose tool and the application of a variety of quality appraisal strategies, we provide examples from a brief summary of quality assessments from meta-analyses of psychological survey research (Table 1)1 We identified two Quality tool used

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Summary

A Case For a Study Quality Appraisal in Survey Studies in Psychology

Keywords: study quality appraisal, psychology, correlational studies, survey studies, evidence syntheses, transparency Reviewed by: Timo Gnambs, Leibniz Institute for Educational Trajectories (LG), Germany Specialty section: This article was submitted to Quantitative Psychology and Measurement, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology Citation: Protogerou C and Hagger MS (2019) A Case For a Study Quality Appraisal in Survey Studies in Psychology. Front. Psychol. 9:2788.

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CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

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