Persuasion Bias in Science: Can Economics Help?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Persuasion Bias in Science : Can Economics Help? / Di Tillio, Alfredo; Ottaviani, Marco; Sørensen, Peter Norman.

In: Economic Journal, Vol. 127, No. 605, 01.10.2017, p. F266-F304.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Di Tillio, A, Ottaviani, M & Sørensen, PN 2017, 'Persuasion Bias in Science: Can Economics Help?', Economic Journal, vol. 127, no. 605, pp. F266-F304. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12515

APA

Di Tillio, A., Ottaviani, M., & Sørensen, P. N. (2017). Persuasion Bias in Science: Can Economics Help? Economic Journal, 127(605), F266-F304. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12515

Vancouver

Di Tillio A, Ottaviani M, Sørensen PN. Persuasion Bias in Science: Can Economics Help? Economic Journal. 2017 Oct 1;127(605):F266-F304. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12515

Author

Di Tillio, Alfredo ; Ottaviani, Marco ; Sørensen, Peter Norman. / Persuasion Bias in Science : Can Economics Help?. In: Economic Journal. 2017 ; Vol. 127, No. 605. pp. F266-F304.

Bibtex

@article{ab5211c910de4b0da83c1925f62d88cc,
title = "Persuasion Bias in Science: Can Economics Help?",
abstract = "We investigate the impact of conflicts of interests on randomised controlled trials in a game-theoretic framework. A researcher seeks to persuade an evaluator that the causal effect of a treatment outweighs its cost, to justify acceptance. The researcher can use private information to manipulate the experiment in three alternative ways: (i) sampling subjects based on their treatment effect, (ii) assigning subjects to treatment based on their baseline outcome, or (iii) selectively reporting experimental outcomes. The resulting biases have different welfare implications: for sufficiently high acceptance cost, in our binary illustration the evaluator loses in cases (i) and (iii) but benefits in case (ii).",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Randomised controlled trials, Strategic selection, Welfare, D82, D83C10, C90",
author = "{Di Tillio}, Alfredo and Marco Ottaviani and S{\o}rensen, {Peter Norman}",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/ecoj.12515",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
pages = "F266--F304",
journal = "The Economic Journal",
issn = "0013-0133",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "605",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Persuasion Bias in Science

T2 - Can Economics Help?

AU - Di Tillio, Alfredo

AU - Ottaviani, Marco

AU - Sørensen, Peter Norman

PY - 2017/10/1

Y1 - 2017/10/1

N2 - We investigate the impact of conflicts of interests on randomised controlled trials in a game-theoretic framework. A researcher seeks to persuade an evaluator that the causal effect of a treatment outweighs its cost, to justify acceptance. The researcher can use private information to manipulate the experiment in three alternative ways: (i) sampling subjects based on their treatment effect, (ii) assigning subjects to treatment based on their baseline outcome, or (iii) selectively reporting experimental outcomes. The resulting biases have different welfare implications: for sufficiently high acceptance cost, in our binary illustration the evaluator loses in cases (i) and (iii) but benefits in case (ii).

AB - We investigate the impact of conflicts of interests on randomised controlled trials in a game-theoretic framework. A researcher seeks to persuade an evaluator that the causal effect of a treatment outweighs its cost, to justify acceptance. The researcher can use private information to manipulate the experiment in three alternative ways: (i) sampling subjects based on their treatment effect, (ii) assigning subjects to treatment based on their baseline outcome, or (iii) selectively reporting experimental outcomes. The resulting biases have different welfare implications: for sufficiently high acceptance cost, in our binary illustration the evaluator loses in cases (i) and (iii) but benefits in case (ii).

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Randomised controlled trials

KW - Strategic selection

KW - Welfare

KW - D82

KW - D83C10

KW - C90

U2 - 10.1111/ecoj.12515

DO - 10.1111/ecoj.12515

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85032354093

VL - 127

SP - F266-F304

JO - The Economic Journal

JF - The Economic Journal

SN - 0013-0133

IS - 605

ER -

ID: 188112158