Home

nonreproducibility

Nonreproducibility is the inability to reproduce findings of a study when others attempt to repeat the work. In common usage, the term is connected to two related ideas: reproducibility, where others can obtain the same results using the original data and analysis, and replicability, where independent researchers obtain the same conclusions using new data or methods. Because terminology varies by field, nonreproducibility is often described as part of broader concerns about irreproducible research.

A range of factors can produce nonreproducible results. Insufficient reporting of experimental procedures, data, and code

Mitigation efforts include preregistration of study protocols, sharing of raw data and analysis code, and adherence

makes
exact
repetition
impossible.
Small
sample
sizes
and
low
statistical
power
can
yield
unstable
estimates.
Analytical
flexibility,
p-hacking,
and
hypotheses
formed
after
results
are
known
(HARKing)
can
inflate
false
positives.
Publication
bias
toward
positive
results,
errors,
and
differences
in
materials
or
conditions
across
laboratories
also
contribute.
Data
quality
issues
and
inadequate
data
management
can
further
hinder
replication.
to
reporting
guidelines.
Registered
reports,
larger
samples,
and
standardized
methods
improve
reliability.
Independent
replication
and
meta-analyses
help
assess
robustness
across
studies.
The
study
of
nonreproducibility
has
informed
reforms
in
many
disciplines
and
underpins
ongoing
movements
toward
transparency
and
open
science.