L. K. John, G. Loewenstein, D. Prelec, Measuring the prevalence of questionable research practices with incentives for truth telling. Psychol. Sci. 23, 524–532 (2012). doi: 10.1177/ 0956797611430953; pmid: 22508865
John, Loewenstein and Prelec conducted a survey with over 2,000 psychologists to identify to what extent they used questionable research practices (QPRs). The respondents were encouraged to report their behavior truthfully, as they could increase donations to a charity of their choice by giving more truthful answers.
Results showed that a high number of psychologists admitted to engaging in QRPs. Almost 70% of all respondents admitting to not reporting results for all dependent measures and around 50% of respondents admitting to reporting only studies that showed the desired results.
Moreover, results showed that researchers suspected their peers also occasionally engaged in such QRPs, but that psychologists thought that there was generally no good justification for engaging in QRPs.
