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scientific writing

November 6, 2019September 23, 2020  by Don van Ravenzwaaij, Casper Albers, Maarten Derksen & Rink Hoekstra

Citing is Easy, Reading is Hard

Don van Ravenzwaaij, Casper Albers, Maarten Derksen and Rink Hoekstra discuss how statistical misreporting can be propagated by experts. (Part 2 of our series on citation practices in psychology.)

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in History and Theory of Psychology / Psychometrics 0 comments
October 2, 2019October 1, 2019  by Marije aan het Rot

From how to write to how to cite

I decided to write this blog about writing and citing after stumbling upon a phantom article – a cited article on how to write that does not actually exist, but nonetheless has been cited hundreds of times.

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in Education / Op-Ed 0 comments
April 29, 2015  by Maarten Derksen

“Objective” science and the “subjective” I

Students are taught not to use the personal pronoun “I” in their theses. That’s wrong: science needs more “I”, not less.

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in Column / History and Theory of Psychology 9 comments

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