If you tweet, you may be familiar with #OverlyHonestMethods. If not, this link to Popular Science will set you on the right track. As it says: "In 140 characters or less, the info that didn't get through peer review."
Here are some beauties that may strike an accord with certain applied econometricians:
- "Our results were non-significant at p > 0.05, but they're humdingers at p > 0.1"
- "Experiment was repeated until we had three statistically significant similar results and could discard the outliers"
- "We decided to use Technique Y because it's new and sexy, plus hot and cool. And because we could."
- "I can't send you the original data because I don't remember what my excel file names mean anymore."
- "Non-linear regression analysis was performed in Graph Pad Prism because SPSS is a nightmare."
- "We made a thorough comparison of all post-hoc tests while our statistician wasn't looking."
- "Our paper lacks post-2010 references as it's taken the co-authors that long to agree on where to submit the final draft."
- "If you pay close attention to our degrees-of-freedom you will realize we have no idea what test we actually ran."
- "Additional variables were not considered because everyone involved is tired of working on this paper."
- "We used jargon instead of plain English to prove that a decade of grad school and postdoc made us smart."
Oh yes!!!!
© 2013, David E. Giles
"I did X as my advisor told me to and he's the boss "
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