Short Answer

A psychology student analyzes two replication studies and concludes: 'Study A proved the theory because its p-value was p=0.04p = 0.04, whereas Study B failed to replicate the effect because its p-value was p=0.06p = 0.06.' Analyze the analytical flaw in the student's reasoning based on criticisms of null hypothesis testing.

Question: A psychology student analyzes two replication studies and concludes: 'Study A proved the theory because its p-value was p=0.04p = 0.04, whereas Study B failed to replicate the effect because its p-value was p=0.06p = 0.06.' Analyze the analytical flaw in the student's reasoning based on criticisms of null hypothesis testing.

Sample answer: The student's flaw lies in treating a rigid, mathematically arbitrary threshold of p<0.05p < 0.05 as a fundamental dividing line. Because p=0.04p = 0.04 and p=0.06p = 0.06 represent nearly identical findings, concluding that one study succeeded and the other failed is scientifically unjustified.

Key points:

  • The student incorrectly relies on the conventional p<0.05p < 0.05 threshold as a rigid, non-arbitrary boundary.
  • The student treats nearly identical findings (p=0.04p = 0.04 and p=0.06p = 0.06) as fundamentally different.
  • Concluding one study succeeded while the other failed based solely on this arbitrary dividing line is scientifically unjustified.

Rubric: The answer should identify that the student is incorrectly treating a rigid, arbitrary cutoff (p<0.05p < 0.05) as a fundamental difference. It must note that p=0.04p = 0.04 and p=0.06p = 0.06 are nearly identical results that should not be interpreted as opposite outcomes (success vs. failure).

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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