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Peer-reviewed

The Taboo Against Explicit Causal Inference in Nonexperimental Psychology

Michael P. Grosz, Julia M. Rohrer, Felix Thoemmes

Perspectives on Psychological Science · 2020

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Summary

Causal inference is a central goal of research. However, most psychologists refrain from explicitly addressing causal research questions and avoid drawing causal inference on the basis of nonexperimental evidence. We argue that this taboo against causal inference in nonexperimental psychology impairs study design and data analysis, holds back cumulative research, leads to a disconnect between original findings and how they are interpreted in subsequent work, and limits the relevance of nonexperimental psychology for policymaking. At the same time, the taboo does not prevent researchers from interpreting findings as causal effects-the inference is simply made implicitly, and assumptions remain unarticulated. Thus, we recommend that nonexperimental psychologists begin to talk openly about ca

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1177/1745691620921521
Catalogue ID
SNmoj7nwg1-597gfc
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