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Multidimensional Signals and Analytic Flexibility: Estimating Degrees of Freedom in Human-Speech Analyses

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posted on 2023-09-21, 07:33 authored by Stefano Coretta, Joseph V Casillas, Simon Roessig, Michael Franke, Byron Ahn, Ali H Al-Hoorie, Jalal Al-Tamimi, Najd E Alotaibi, Mohammed K AlShakhori, Ruth M Altmiller, Pablo Arantes, Angeliki Athanasopoulou, Melissa M Baese-Berk, George Bailey, Cheman Baira A Sangma, Eleonora J Beier, Gabriela M Benavides, Nicole Benker, Emelia P BensonMeyer, Nina R Benway, Grant M Berry, Liwen Bing, Christina Bjorndahl, Mariška Bolyanatz, Aaron Braver, Violet A Brown, Alicia M Brown, Alejna Brugos, Erin M Buchanan, Tanna Butlin, Andrés Buxó-Lugo, Coline Caillol, Francesco Cangemi, Christopher Carignan, Sita Carraturo, Tiphaine Caudrelier, Eleanor Chodroff, Michelle Cohn, Johanna Cronenberg, Olivier Crouzet, Erica L Dagar, Charlotte Dawson, Carissa A Diantoro, Marie Dokovova, Shiloh Drake, Fengting Du, Margaux Dubuis, Florent Duême, Matthew Durward, Ander Egurtzegi, Mahmoud M Elsherif, Janina Esser, Emmanuel Ferragne, Fernanda Ferreira, Lauren K Fink, Sara Finley, Kurtis Foster, Paul Foulkes, Rosa Franzke, Gabriel Frazer-McKee, Robert Fromont, Christina García, Jason Geller, Camille L Grasso, Pia Greca, Martine Grice, Magdalena S Grose-Hodge, Amelia J Gully, Caitlin Halfacre, Ivy Hauser, Jen Hay, Robert Haywood, Sam Hellmuth, Allison I Hilger, Nicole Holliday, Damar Hoogland, Yaqian Huang, Vincent Hughes, Ane Icardo Isasa, Zlatomira G Ilchovska, Hae-Sung Jeon, Jacq Jones, Mágat N Junges, Stephanie Kaefer, Constantijn Kaland, Matthew C Kelley, Niamh E Kelly, Thomas Kettig, Ghada Khattab, Ruud Koolen, Emiel Krahmer, Dorota Krajewska, Andreas Krug, Abhilasha A Kumar, Anna Lander, Tomas O Lentz, Wanyin Li, Yanyu Li, Maria Lialiou, Ronaldo M Lima, Justin JH Lo, Julio Cesar Lopez Otero, Bradley Mackay, Bethany MacLeod, Mel Mallard, Carol-Ann Mary McConnellogue, George Moroz, Mridhula Murali, Ladislas Nalborczyk, Filip Nenadić, Jessica Nieder, Dušan Nikolić, Francisco GS Nogueira, Heather M Offerman, Elisa Passoni, Maud Pélissier, Scott J Perry, Alexandra M Pfiffner, Michael Proctor, Ryan Rhodes, Nicole Rodríguez, Elizabeth Roepke, Jan P Röer, Lucia Sbacco, Rebecca Scarborough, Felix Schaeffler, Erik Schleef, Dominic Schmitz, Alexander Shiryaev, Márton Sóskuthy, Malin Spaniol, Joseph A Stanley, Alyssa Strickler, Alessandro Tavano, Fabian Tomaschek, Benjamin V Tucker, Rory Turnbull, Kingsley O Ugwuanyi, Iñigo Urrestarazu-Porta, Ruben van de Vijver, Kristin J Van Engen, Emiel van Miltenburg, Bruce Xiao Wang, Natasha Warner, Simon Wehrle, Hans Westerbeek, Seth Wiener, Stephen Winters, Sidney G-J Wong, Anna Wood, Jane Wottawa, Chenzi Xu, Germán Zárate-Sández, Georgia Zellou, Cong Zhang, Jian Zhu, Timo B Roettger
Recent empirical studies have highlighted the large degree of analytic flexibility in data analysis that can lead to substantially different conclusions based on the same data set. Thus, researchers have expressed their concerns that these researcher degrees of freedom might facilitate bias and can lead to claims that do not stand the test of time. Even greater flexibility is to be expected in fields in which the primary data lend themselves to a variety of possible operationalizations. The multidimensional, temporally extended nature of speech constitutes an ideal testing ground for assessing the variability in analytic approaches, which derives not only from aspects of statistical modeling but also from decisions regarding the quantification of the measured behavior. In this study, we gave the same speech-production data set to 46 teams of researchers and asked them to answer the same research question, resulting in substantial variability in reported effect sizes and their interpretation. Using Bayesian meta-analytic tools, we further found little to no evidence that the observed variability can be explained by analysts’ prior beliefs, expertise, or the perceived quality of their analyses. In light of this idiosyncratic variability, we recommend that researchers more transparently share details of their analysis, strengthen the link between theoretical construct and quantitative system, and calibrate their (un)certainty in their conclusions.

Funding

Human interaction and the evolution of spoken accent

European Research Council

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ANR-10-LABX-0083

ANR-18-IDEX-0001

Modern Approaches to Diachronic Phonology Applied to Basque – MADPAB

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

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PID2020-118445GB-I00

281511265-SFB 1252

NSF ACI-1341006

NSF ACI-1541396

History

Citation

Coretta S, Casillas JV, Roessig S, et al. Multidimensional Signals and Analytic Flexibility: Estimating Degrees of Freedom in Human-Speech Analyses. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science. 2023;6(3). doi:10.1177/25152459231162567

Author affiliation

1Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science

Volume

6

Issue

3

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

2515-2459

eissn

2515-2467

Acceptance date

2023-02-02

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-07-20

Language

en

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