PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Neglect of publication bias compromises meta-analyses of educational research.

  • Ivan Ropovik,
  • Matus Adamkovic,
  • David Greger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252415
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0252415

Abstract

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Because negative findings have less chance of getting published, available studies tend to be a biased sample. This leads to an inflation of effect size estimates to an unknown degree. To see how meta-analyses in education account for publication bias, we surveyed all meta-analyses published in the last five years in the Review of Educational Research and Educational Research Review. The results show that meta-analyses usually neglect publication bias adjustment. In the minority of meta-analyses adjusting for bias, mostly non-principled adjustment methods were used, and only rarely were the conclusions based on corrected estimates, rendering the adjustment inconsequential. It is argued that appropriate state-of-the-art adjustment (e.g., selection models) should be attempted by default, yet one needs to take into account the uncertainty inherent in any meta-analytic inference under bias. We conclude by providing practical recommendations on dealing with publication bias.