Thursday, July 7, 2022

Many-Analysts Religion Project: Reflection and conclusion

Many-analysts religion project: reflection and conclusion. Suzanne Hoogeveen et al. Religion, Brain & Behavior, Jul 5 2022. https://doi.org/10.1080/2153599X.2022.2070263

In the main article on the Many-Analysts Religion Project (MARP) the results of the 120 analysis teams were summarized by taking each team's reported effect size and subjective assessment of the relation between religiosity and well-being, and the moderating role of cultural norms on this relation (Hoogeveen et al., 2022). The many-analysts approach allowed us to appraise the uncertainty of the outcomes, which has been identified as one of the pillars of good statistical practice (Wagenmakers et al., 2021). A downside of this approach, however, is that a fine-grained consideration of the details and nuances of the results becomes difficult. Summaries of the individual approaches are documented in the teams' OSF project folders, but time and space did not permit the inclusion of details on each of the individual analysis pipelines in the main article.

However, we believe the scope of the project and the effort of the analysis teams justify highlighting some more in-depth observations. Here, we aim to address these supplementary findings, taking the points raised in the 17 commentaries written by various participating analysts as a guideline. We identified three overarching themes in the commentaries and our own experiences. First, there was a need for more focus on theoretical depth and specificity. We refer to this aspect as “zooming in.” Second, multiple commentaries reflected on the broader implications of our results, elaborating on robustness and (the limits of) generalizability. We refer to this aspect as “zooming out.” Third, several commentaries addressed the appropriateness of the analysts' chosen statistical models given the MARP data.

In the following sections, we will first zoom in and address the issue of theoretical specificity. We will then zoom out and discuss to what extent the MARP results are robust and can be generalized. Subsequently, we discuss some methodological concerns, mostly related to the structure of the data. Finally, we will reflect on our experience of organizing a many-analysts project and highlight some lessons learned.


5. Concluding remarks

The main finding of the MARP is that religiosity and well-being are positively associated. This relation was established in a strictly confirmatory manner and seems robust against a plethora of different analytic decisions and strategies. In addition, the positive relation between individual religiosity and well-being appears stronger when religion is perceived to be normative in a particular country than when it is perceived as less normative. This moderating effect of cultural norms of religion was found consistently in the same direction but appears less robust than the main association between religiosity and well-being.

Many-analysts approaches are relatively new to the social sciences and we hope that they will become more widely adopted in the coming years. We believe the two main merits of a many-analysts approach are that it provides (1) an indication of the robustness of the effect on interest, and (2) a concrete demonstration of the variety of theoretical angles and statistical strategies that may be added to researchers' toolboxes. We would recommend the many-analysts approach especially for much-debated research questions that are tested using a fairly straightforward design (e.g., simple associations or effects from an existing theory instead of complex cognitive models for a new hypothesis).

We consider the MARP a positive example of team science and would like to thank the analysis teams for their efforts. In fact, we are intrigued by the creative contributions of the teams exploring different aspects of religiosity and well-being beyond our imposed research questions. We hope the MARP can serve as an inspiration for future many-analysts projects.


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