TY - JOUR T1 - Empirical assessment of published effect sizes and power in the recent cognitive neuroscience and psychology literature JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/071530 SP - 071530 AU - Denes Szucs AU - John PA Ioannidis Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/08/25/071530.abstract N2 - We have empirically assessed the distribution of published effect sizes and estimated power by extracting more than 100,000 statistical records from about 10,000 cognitive neuroscience and psychology papers published during the past 5 years. The reported median effect size was d=0.93 (inter-quartile range: 0.64-1.46) for nominally statistically significant results and d=0.24 (0.11-0.42) for non-significant results. Median power to detect small, medium and large effects was 0.12, 0.44 and 0.73, reflecting no improvement through the past half-century. Power was lowest for cognitive neuroscience journals. 14% of papers reported some statistically significant results, although the respective F statistic and degrees of freedom proved that these were non-significant; p value errors positively correlated with journal impact factors. False report probability is likely to exceed 50% for the whole literature. In light of our findings the recently reported low replication success in psychology is realistic and worse performance may be expected for cognitive neuroscience. ER -