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Collaborative open science as a way to reproducibility and new insights in primate cognition research

Authors :
Many Primates
Altschul, Drew M.
Beran, Michael J.
Bohn, Manuel
Caspar, Kai R.
Fichtel, Claudia
Försterling, Marlene
Grebe, Nicholas M.
Hernández Aguilar, Adriana
Kwok, Sze Chai
Llorente Espino, Miquel
Motes Rodrigo, Alba
Proctor, Darby
Sánchez Amaro, Alejandro
Simpson, Elizabeth A.
Szabelska, Anna
Taylor, Derry
Van der Mescht, Jolene
Völter, Christoph J.
Watzek, Julia
Source :
© Japanese Psychological Review, 2019, vol. 62, núm. 3, p. 205-220, Articles publicats (D-PS), Many Primates Altschul, Drew M. Beran, Michael J. Bohn, Manuel Caspar, Kai R. Fichtel, Claudia Försterling, Marlene Grebe, Nicholas M. Hernández Aguilar, Adriana Kwok, Sze Chai Llorente Espino, Miquel Motes Rodrigo, Alba Proctor, Darby Sa&#769nchez Amaro, Alejandro Simpson, Elizabeth A. Szabelska, Anna Taylor, Derry van der Mescht, Jolene Völter, Christoph J. Watzek, Julia 2019 Collaborative open science as a way to reproducibility and new insights in primate cognition research Japanese Psychological Review 62 3 205 220, DUGiDocs – Universitat de Girona, instname
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The field of primate cognition studies how primates, including humans, perceive, process, store, retrieve, and use information to guide decision making and other behavior. Much of this research is motivated by a desire to understand how these abilities evolved. Large and diverse samples from a wide range of species are vital to achieving this goal. In reality, however, primate cognition research suffers from small sample sizes and is often limited to a handful of species, which constrains the evolutionary inferences we can draw. We conducted a systematic review of primate cognition research published between 2014 and 2019 to quantify the extent of this problem. Across 574 studies, the median sample size was 7 individuals. Less than 15% of primate species were studied at all, and only 19% of studies included more than one species. Further, the species that were studied varied widely in how much research attention they received, partly because a small number of test sites contributed most of the studies. These results suggest that the generalizability of primate cognition studies may be severely limited. Publication bias, questionable research practices, and a lack of replication attempts may exacerbate these problems. We describe the ManyPrimates project as one approach to overcoming some of these issues by establishing an infrastructure for large-scale collaboration in primate cognition research. Building on similar initiatives in other areas of psychology, this approach has already yielded one of the largest and most diverse primate samples to date and enables us to ask many research questions that can only be addressed through collaboration

Subjects

Subjects :
Primates
Cognition
Primats
Cognició

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
© Japanese Psychological Review, 2019, vol. 62, núm. 3, p. 205-220, Articles publicats (D-PS), Many Primates Altschul, Drew M. Beran, Michael J. Bohn, Manuel Caspar, Kai R. Fichtel, Claudia Försterling, Marlene Grebe, Nicholas M. Hernández Aguilar, Adriana Kwok, Sze Chai Llorente Espino, Miquel Motes Rodrigo, Alba Proctor, Darby Sa&#769nchez Amaro, Alejandro Simpson, Elizabeth A. Szabelska, Anna Taylor, Derry van der Mescht, Jolene Völter, Christoph J. Watzek, Julia 2019 Collaborative open science as a way to reproducibility and new insights in primate cognition research Japanese Psychological Review 62 3 205 220, DUGiDocs – Universitat de Girona, instname
Accession number :
edsair.RECOLECTA.....ca08e13456485d3dfe3625b1e5aaaba0