Brent W. Roberts
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bwroberts.bsky.social
Brent W. Roberts
@bwroberts.bsky.social
Respirating carbon-based life form. Pit of despair dweller. Bread maker. Sometimes personality psychologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
So thrilled to see this paper in print at PSPR—I propose a new theoretical model of self-protection motivation that reimagines how people might think, feel, and act when navigating self-threats. I enjoy this sort of theoretical work & excited to share it!

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Self-Protection Motivation and Its Psychological Construction: A Process Model Distinguishing Two Unique Motivational Orientations - William B. Meese, 2025
Academic This article introduces the Modern Constructivist Model of Motivated Self-Protection (MCM-MSP), an integrative and novel theoretical account of two dis...
journals.sagepub.com
December 29, 2025 at 1:47 PM
This adds another meaning to "I'm Irish"
December 31, 2025 at 12:58 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Giving the gift of negative data 🥰

Since I joined @lsajournal.org I have handled several stellar manuscripts that report null results. These papers do very well and reviewers almost always appreciate them!

Thanks @rockefeller.edu news team for the article!

www.rockefeller.edu/news/38829-t...
The value of publishing negative data - News
Scientific journals love news-worthy results. Editors want to publish studies with novel data that scientists will eagerly read and cite in their own work. Because of this desire for novelty, studies ...
www.rockefeller.edu
December 23, 2025 at 1:26 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
In episode 1132, I talk with Dr. Kevin Mitchell (@wiringthebrain.bsky.social) about free will, his debates with Robert Sapolsky, the genomic code, and human embryo editing. #Neuroscience #Genetics #Science

youtu.be/euuhGjxVmTE
#1132 Kevin Mitchell: Free Will, Robert Sapolsky, the Genomic Code, and Human Embryo Editing
YouTube video by The Dissenter
youtu.be
December 28, 2025 at 11:14 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Yikes!
“Increased oxygen consumption – for instance in areas involved in calculation – did not coincide with the expected rise in blood flow. …analyses showed that these regions met their additional energy demand by extracting more oxygen from the unchanged blood supply.”

www.tum.de/en/news-and-...
40 percent of MRI signals misinterpreted
Interpretation of numerous MRI data may be incorrect: blood flow is not a reliable indicator of brain activity.
www.tum.de
December 27, 2025 at 10:59 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Merry Chrismukkah to my readers and friends. I wrote something you might enjoy.

open.substack.com/pub/michaeli...
Why Do Middle-Aged Men Quote This Failed Comedy to Each Other?
Happy Christmukkah to all the Little Urban Achievers out there!
open.substack.com
December 24, 2025 at 3:59 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
"Behavioural scientists are increasingly calling for context as a key to addressing pressing problems caused by human behaviour. However, despite its powerful ability to generate contextual hypotheses on the basis of relatively simple rules, ecological thinking is rarely applied to human behaviour"
Behavioural sciences need behavioural ecology - Nature Human Behaviour
Behavioural scientists want to see more consideration of context — so why are they not using tools derived from ecology, the science of all life in context? We invite behavioural scientists to align t...
www.nature.com
December 22, 2025 at 8:34 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Do not cite an academic paper unless you’ve read it
AI Is Inventing Academic Papers That Don't Exist -- And They're Being Cited in Real Journals
Academic articles from authors using large language model are creating an ecosystem of fake research that threatens human knowledge itself.
www.rollingstone.com
December 19, 2025 at 4:46 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
"Most top achievers (Nobel laureates and world-class musicians, athletes, chess players) demonstrated lower performance than many peers during their early years. Across the highest adult performance, peak performance is negatively correlated with early performance" www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Recent discoveries on the acquisition of the highest levels of human performance
Scientists have long debated the origins of exceptional human achievements. This literature review summarizes recent evidence from multiple domains on the acquisition of world-class performance. We re...
www.science.org
December 20, 2025 at 6:30 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Finally, @bjoernhommel.bsky.social's and my paper introducing the SurveyBot3000 is officially out in AMPPS. It's a fine-tuned language model that guesstimates correlations between survey items from text alone. Not perfectly, but useful for search, for example.
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
December 18, 2025 at 8:21 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
The package formerly known as papercheck has changed its name to metacheck! We're checking more than just papers, with functions to assess OSF projects, github repos, and AsPredicted pre-registrations, with more being developed all the time.

scienceverse.github.io/metacheck/
Check Research Outputs for Best Practices
A modular, extendable system for automatically checking research outputs for best practices using text search, R code, and/or (optional) LLM queries.
scienceverse.github.io
November 3, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Join our Replicability Project: Health Behavior!

We have 55 replication studies underway, our target is 65-70.

We are only recruiting for secondary data replications--i.e., using existing data to test the original question.

Here's a list of studies we think could be feasible.

If interested...
Replications Sourcing Sheet
docs.google.com
December 18, 2025 at 2:29 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Just published in Behavior Research Methods:

The individual-level precision of implicit measures

w/ @ianhussey.mmmdata.io

🧵👇

link.springer.com/article/10.3...
The individual-level precision of implicit measures - Behavior Research Methods
Implicit measures are used extensively in psychological science. One fundamental goal of these measures is to provide information diagnostic of an individual’s attitudes or beliefs. After 25 years of ...
link.springer.com
December 9, 2025 at 11:20 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Excited to share a Registered Report in J. of Personality looking at the “perils of partialing” – led by the Bluesky-less Leigha Rose with @drlynam.bsky.social and me. (1)

onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Perils of Partialing: Can Scholars Predict Residualized Variables' Nomological Nets?
Objective Partialing is a statistical procedure in which the variance shared among two or more constructs is removed, allowing researchers to examine the unique properties of the residualized, parti...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
December 4, 2025 at 5:07 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Diederik Stapel was a massive watershed moment in psychology.

However, he was -- and let's be slightly glib here -- some guy from The Netherlands who wrote social psychology papers.

The full accounting of the Eysenck case is approx, at minimum, TWO STAPELS.

retractionwatch.com/2025/12/03/n...
Number of ‘unsafe’ publications by psychologist Hans Eysenck could be ‘high and far reaching’
Hans Eysenck A “high and far reaching” number of papers and books by Hans Eysenck could be “unsafe,” according to an updated statement from King’s College London, where the psychologist was a profe…
retractionwatch.com
December 3, 2025 at 5:34 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Now we wrote a piece about many things we always wanted to say about replications.

How they are used, tracked and valued by the science community. And how we can evaluate their results, whatever those may be 🤔

Read the preprint 📃 osf.io/preprints/me...

Browse the Hub 🌐 forrt.org/replication-...
December 3, 2025 at 6:06 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Are you someone "who cannot conduct or continue their work in the USA appropriately because of actual political pressure" and are interested in a two-year, funded post-doctoral fellowship at a German University to do that work? Then check out the link below! #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
Early Career Rescue Fellowship | Universität Tübingen
Academic freedom is under pressure today. This requires rescue havens of free research. The Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (FRIAS), the Tübingen College of Fellows (CoF), and the…
uni-tuebingen.de
December 3, 2025 at 1:58 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
Fadeout of cognitive training remains one of the more replicable
findings in psychology in this preregistered study of 300 preschool children. Well-done study with a 4 year follow up. The language gains either faded or the control group caught up.
journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....
December 3, 2025 at 10:14 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
In case you have missed Simine Vazire's excellent webinar yesterday, here is the link to watch it online: youtu.be/_vb1CNwC3CM Thanks again @simine.com for staying up so late and thanks to the audience for the great questions!
PCI Webinar series #13 - Simine Vazire - Recognizing and responding to a replication crisis
youtu.be
December 2, 2025 at 10:17 AM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
New paper in press at JPSP! An adversarial collaboration focusing on a large-scale test of how strongly implicit racial attitudes predict discriminatory behavior. Pre-print here: osf.io/preprints/ps...
December 2, 2025 at 2:14 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
A Review in Nature Reviews Psychology proposes that understanding violent extremism needs integration of trait-descriptive models with process-oriented frameworks that outline mechanisms in social reactivity, needs and mindsets that make some people more at risk for engaging in violent extremism. 🧪
Individual differences in violent extremism - Nature Reviews Psychology
In this Review, Obaidi et al. propose that understanding violent extremism requires integration of trait-descriptive models (such as Big Five and HEXACO) with process-oriented frameworks that outline mechanisms in social reactivity, needs and mindsets that make some individuals more at risk for engaging in violent extremism.
go.nature.com
November 26, 2025 at 2:38 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
If descriptive research is supposed to be one cure for the replication crisis, why do reviewers and editors keep downgrading descriptive research for not advancing theory? I explore this (in the context of sex and singlehood) in my latest Substack post. unromanticprof.substack.com/p/on-the-val...
On the Value of Just Observing
What descriptive research revealed about singles' sexual satisfaction
unromanticprof.substack.com
December 1, 2025 at 4:18 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
“The articles in AMPPS offer, month in and month out, the invitation to practice aligning your values, intentions, and actions to do less scientific harm and reach for the methodological ceiling”

Grateful to @dsbarra.bsky.social for continuing what @profsimons.bsky.social & co started at AMPPS!
November 26, 2025 at 7:38 PM
Reposted by Brent W. Roberts
1/2

New open access paper in which we apply the Nyquist-Shannon thereom from signal processing to 2 EMA datasets to figure out the optimal sampling frequency for EMA assessments.

🧪 #psychscisky #statssky

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Optimizing the frequency of ecological momentary assessments using signal processing | Psychological Medicine | Cambridge Core
Optimizing the frequency of ecological momentary assessments using signal processing - Volume 55
www.cambridge.org
November 27, 2025 at 12:04 AM