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Original Articles

A Social Priming Data Set With Troubling Oddities

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Doug Rohrer, Harold Pashler & Christine R. Harris. (2019) Discrepant Data and Improbable Results: An Examination of Vohs, Mead, and Goode (2006). Basic and Applied Social Psychology 41:4, pages 263-271.
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Ronald D. Fricker$suffix/text()$suffix/text(), Katherine Burke, Xiaoyan Han & William H. Woodall. (2019) Assessing the Statistical Analyses Used in Basic and Applied Social Psychology After Their p-Value Ban. The American Statistician 73:sup1, pages 374-384.
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David Trafimow. (2018) An a priori solution to the replication crisis. Philosophical Psychology 31:8, pages 1188-1214.
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Harold Pashler, Doug Rohrer, Ian Abramson, Tanya Wolfson & Christine R. Harris. (2016) Response to Comments by Chatterjee, Rose, and Sinha. Basic and Applied Social Psychology 38:1, pages 41-46.
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Promothesh Chatterjee. (2016) Response to Pashler et al. (2016). Basic and Applied Social Psychology 38:1, pages 19-29.
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Randall L. Rose. (2016) Cautious Thoughts on “A Social Priming Data Set With Troubling Oddities”. Basic and Applied Social Psychology 38:1, pages 30-32.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Devin Lange, Shaurya Sahai, Jeff M. Phillips & Alexander Lex. (2023) Ferret: Reviewing Tabular Datasets for Manipulation. Computer Graphics Forum 42:3, pages 187-198.
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Marta Ferrero, Miguel A. Vadillo & Samuel P. León. (2021) A valid evaluation of the theory of multiple intelligences is not yet possible: Problems of methodological quality for intervention studies. Intelligence 88, pages 101566.
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Oliver Genschow, Johannes Schuler, Emiel Cracco, Marcel Brass & Michaela Wänke. (2019) The Effect of Money Priming on Self-Focus in the Imitation-Inhibition Task. Experimental Psychology 66:6, pages 423-436.
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Johannes Schuler, Igor Ivanov & Michaela Wänke. (2017) Does money change political views? – An investigation of money priming and the preference for right-wing politics. Journal of Social and Political Psychology 5:2, pages 396-414.
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