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The stimulus-response crisis.

Robyn Wilford1, Juan Ardila-Cifuentes2, Edward Baggs3

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Psychology research faces a generalizability crisis due to experimental variance. A new methodology, perturbation experiments, offers a solution by overcoming limitations of the traditional stimulus-response paradigm.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Research Methodology

Background:

  • The field of psychology faces a significant generalizability crisis.
  • A key factor identified is the failure to adequately account for within-experiment variance.
  • The prevalent stimulus-response paradigm may inherently contribute to this crisis.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify the root causes of the generalizability crisis in psychology.
  • To propose an alternative research methodology that addresses the limitations of current paradigms.
  • To offer a solution for improving the reliability and applicability of psychological findings.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of the stimulus-response paradigm's limitations in accounting for experimental variance.
  • Introduction and theoretical justification of perturbation experiments as an alternative methodology.
  • Comparison of perturbation experiments with traditional methods regarding generalizability.

Main Results:

  • The stimulus-response paradigm inherently struggles with accounting for within-experiment variance, exacerbating the generalizability crisis.
  • Perturbation experiments provide a robust framework for addressing variance.
  • This alternative methodology is less susceptible to the problems plaguing current psychological research.

Conclusions:

  • The generalizability crisis in psychology is a direct consequence of the limitations within the stimulus-response research paradigm.
  • Perturbation experiments represent a promising methodological advancement.
  • Adoption of perturbation experiments can enhance the generalizability and robustness of psychological research findings.