Citation Patterns Following a Strongly Contradictory Replication Result: Four Case Studies From Psychology
Abstract
Replication studies that contradict prior findings may facilitate scientific
self-correction by triggering a reappraisal of the original studies; however, the research
community’s response to replication results has not been studied systematically. One
approach for gauging responses to replication results is to examine how they affect
citations to original studies. In this study, we explored postreplication citation
patterns in the context of four prominent multilaboratory replication attempts published
in the field of psychology that strongly contradicted and outweighed prior findings.
Generally, we observed a small postreplication decline in the number of favorable
citations and a small increase in unfavorable citations. This indicates only modest
corrective effects and implies considerable perpetuation of belief in the original
findings. Replication results that strongly contradict an original finding do not
necessarily nullify its credibility; however, one might at least expect the replication
results to be acknowledged and explicitly debated in subsequent literature. By contrast,
we found substantial citation bias: The majority of articles citing the original studies
neglected to cite relevant replication results. Of those articles that did cite the
replication but continued to cite the original study favorably, approximately half offered
an explicit defense of the original study. Our findings suggest that even replication
results that strongly contradict original findings do not necessarily prompt a corrective
response from the research community.