Footprint of publication selection bias on meta-analyses in medicine, environmental sciences, psychology, and economics

Open Access
Authors
  • H. Doucouliagos
  • J.P.A. Ioannidis
  • W.M. Otte
  • S. Martina
  • T.K. Deresssa
  • S.B. Burns
  • D. Fanelli
  • T.D. Stanley
Publication date 05-2024
Journal Research synthesis methods
Volume | Issue number 15 | 3
Pages (from-to) 500-511
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Publication selection bias undermines the systematic accumulation of evidence. To assess the extent of this problem, we survey over 68,000 meta-analyses containing over 700,000 effect size estimates from medicine (67,386/597,699), environmental sciences (199/12,707), psychology (605/23,563), and economics (327/91,421). Our results indicate that meta-analyses in economics are the most severely contaminated by publication selection bias, closely followed by meta-analyses in environmental sciences and psychology, whereas meta-analyses in medicine are contaminated the least. After adjusting for publication selection bias, the median probability of the presence of an effect decreased from 99.9% to 29.7% in economics, from 98.9% to 55.7% in psychology, from 99.8% to 70.7% in environmental sciences, and from 38.0% to 29.7% in medicine. The median absolute effect sizes (in terms of standardized mean differences) decreased from d = 0.20 to d = 0.07 in economics, from d = 0.37 to d = 0.26 in psychology, from d = 0.62 to d = 0.43 in environmental sciences, and from d = 0.24 to d = 0.13 in medicine.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1002/jrsm.1703
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