3. Peer Review + the Economy

    Cards (13)

      1. Peer Review
      • Final stage of research; scrutiny from specialists (British Psychological Society).
      • Research becomes part of journal/published in textbooks.
    • 1a. Peer Review
      Aims of P.R.
      Allocate Research Funding:
      • Peer evaluation, decide whether award funding.
      Validate Quality/Relevance Research:
      • Assessed for quality/accuracy — formulation of hypothesis, methodology, statistical test + conclusions.
      Suggest Amendments/Improvements:
      • Extreme situations, may be withdrawn.
    • Peer Review (Evaluation)
      General Strengths:
      • Validity + accuracy.
    • Peer Review (Evaluation)
      Anonymity - Strength:
      • Anonymous = honest, objective reviewal.
      Anonymity - Limitation:
      • Reviewers may use anonymity to criticise rivals (competition for limited funding).
      • Open review may be favoured.
    • Peer Review (Evaluation)
      Publication Bias - Limitation:
      • Journal editors may want publish ‘headline grabbing’ or positive findings to increase credibility/publicity.
      • Selectiveness creates false impression.
    • Peer Review (Evaluation)
      Burying Groundbreaking Research - Limitations:
      • Suppress opposition/overly critical of mainstream theories (maintains status quo).
      • Established scientists chosen as reviewers, findings that align w/ current opinions likely passed over new/innovative research.
      • Slow down rate of change.
    • 2. Economy
      Implications of Research for Economy:
      How research influences and benefits/devalues economy.
    • 2a. Economy
      Implications of Research for Economy:
      Attachment Research - Role of the Father.
      • Modern research, role of father different to mother, not less valuable; equally provide emotional support.
      • Mothers may be higher earner (29% full time employment).
      • Share responsibilities = better equipped to maximise income, contributes to economy.
    • 2b. Economy
      Implications of Research for Economy:
      Psychopathology Research - MH Causes/Treatments.
      • Work absences cost economy approx. £15 billion a year.
      • 1/3 absences = MH (depression/anxiety).
      • Quick diagnosis/access to treatments:
      • SSRIs (depression/OCD).
      • Anti-anxiety drugs (stress conditions).
      • Psychotherapies (e.g. CBT).
      • Management of MH = return to work = economic benefit.
    • 3. Economy
      The Nudge Unit:
      • The Behavioural Insights Team (BIT).
      • Gov. organisation apply behavioural economies to improve economic policy/save money.
      • Increase tax, encourage gov. schemes, reduce financial waste.
    • 3a. Economy
      Examples of Nudge Unit
      Attention to Payment Failure - Vehicle Excise Duty:
      • BIT added pic of offending vehicles in letters sent to non-payers.
      • Increased payments (40% to 49%).
    • 3b. Economy
      Examples of Nudge Unit
      Social Norms to Increase Taxes:
      • BIT added notice that people pay taxes on time; increased payment rates.
    • 3c. Economy
      Examples of Nudge Unit
      Encouraging People to Join Organ Donor Register:
      • Reciprocity.
      • When renew car tax, asked if want to join register.
      • 1 month, 8 different messages introduced.
      • 1 million people visited site during this month = large randomised controlled trials.