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Kaisa Snellman
Associate Professor of Organisational Behaviour

Eric Luis Uhlmann
Professor of Organisational Behaviour
Keywords
Crowdsourcing Data Analysis; Scientific Transparency; Research Reliability; Scientific Robustness; Researcher Degrees of Freedom; Analysis-Contingent Results
Journal Article
In this crowdsourced initiative, independent analysts used the same dataset to test two hypotheses regarding the effects of scientists’ gender and professional status on verbosity during group meetings. Not only the analytic approach but also the operationalizations of key variables
were left unconstrained and up to individual analysts. For instance, analysts could choose to operationalize status as job title, institutional ranking, citation counts, or some combination. To maximize transparency regarding the process by which analytic choices are made, the analysts used a platform the authors developed called DataExplained to justify both preferred and rejected analytic paths in real time. Analyses lacking sufficient detail, reproducible code, or with statistical errors were excluded, resulting in 29 analyses in the final sample.