Abstract

Concerns have been growing about the veracity of psychological findings. Many findings in psychological science are based on studies with insufficient statistical power and non-representative samples, or may otherwise be limited to specific, ungeneralizable settings or populations. Large-scale collaboration, in which one or more research projects are conducted across multiple lab sites, offers a pragmatic solution to these and other current methodological challenges. The Psychological Science Accelerator (PSA) is a distributed network of laboratories designed to enable and support crowdsourced research projects. The PSA’s mission is to accelerate the accumulation of reliable and generalizable evidence in psychological science. Here, we describe the background, structure, principles, procedures, benefits, and challenges of the PSA. In contrast to other crowdsourced research networks, the PSA is ongoing (as opposed to time-limited), efficient (in terms of re-using structures and principles for different projects), decentralized, diverse (in terms of participants and researchers), and inclusive (of proposals, contributions, and other relevant input from anyone inside or outside of the network). The PSA and other approaches to crowdsourced psychological science will advance our understanding of mental processes and behaviors by enabling rigorous research and systematically examining its generalizability.

Highlights

  • Director: Dr Christopher R Chartier, Ashland University + 5 Associate Directors (1 each from Africa, Asia, Europe, 2 from US) + over 350 fellow researchers

  • We attempt to meet this challenge with a distributed laboratory network that is ongoing, diverse, and inclusive

  • Project execution: data collection begins after Stage 1 registered report or pre-registration on e.g. osf.io

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Summary

Introduction

Director: Dr Christopher R Chartier, Ashland University + 5 Associate Directors (1 each from Africa, Asia, Europe, 2 from US) + over 350 fellow researchers. Distributed network of psychological science laboratories (currently over 350), representing over 45 countries on all six populated continents, that coordinates data collection for democratically selected studies. Our mission: accelerate the accumulation of reliable and generalizable evidence in psychological science, reducing the distance between truth about human behavior and mental processes and our current understanding.

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