Cognitive Research (May 2024)

The psychological reality of the learned “p < .05” boundary

  • V. N. Vimal Rao,
  • Jeffrey K. Bye,
  • Sashank Varma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-024-00553-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The .05 boundary within Null Hypothesis Statistical Testing (NHST) “has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move” (to quote Douglas Adams). Here, we move past meta-scientific arguments and ask an empirical question: What is the psychological standing of the .05 boundary for statistical significance? We find that graduate students in the psychological sciences show a boundary effect when relating p-values across .05. We propose this psychological boundary is learned through statistical training in NHST and reading a scientific literature replete with “statistical significance”. Consistent with this proposal, undergraduates do not show the same sensitivity to the .05 boundary. Additionally, the size of a graduate student’s boundary effect is not associated with their explicit endorsement of questionable research practices. These findings suggest that training creates distortions in initial processing of p-values, but these might be dampened through scientific processes operating over longer timescales.

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