Implementing <i>Statcheck</i> During Peer Review Is Related to a Steep Decline in Statistical-Reporting Inconsistencies
Abstract
We investigated whether statistical-reporting inconsistencies could be avoided if journals implement the tool
statcheck
in the peer-review process. In a preregistered pretest–posttest quasi-experiment covering more than 7,000 articles and more than 147,000 extracted statistics, we compared the prevalence of reported
p
values that were inconsistent with their degrees of freedom and test statistics in two journals that implemented
statcheck
in their peer-review process (
Psychological Science
and
Journal of Experimental and Social Psychology
) and two matched control journals (
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
and
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
) before and after
statcheck
was implemented. Preregistered multilevel logistic regression analyses showed that the decrease in both inconsistencies and decision inconsistencies around
p
= .05 is considerably steeper in
statcheck
journals than in control journals, offering preliminary support for the notion that
statcheck
can be a useful tool for journals to avoid statistical-reporting inconsistencies in published articles. We discuss limitations and implications of these findings.