Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Data quality, experimental artifacts, and the reactivity of the psychological subject matter

  • Uljana Feest*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Abstract

While the term “reactivity” has come to be associated with specific phenomena in the social sciences, having to do with subjects’ awareness of being studied, this paper takes a broader stance on this concept. I argue that reactivity is a ubiquitous feature of the psychological subject matter and that this fact is a precondition of experimental research, while also posing potential problems for the experimenter. The latter are connected to the worry about distorted data and experimental artifacts. But what are experimental artifacts and what is the most productive way of dealing with them? In this paper, I approach these questions by exploring the ways in which experimenters in psychology simultaneously exploit and suppress the reactivity of their subject matter in order to produce experimental data that speak to the question or subject matter at hand. Highlighting the artificiality of experimental data, I raise (and answer) the question of what distinguishes a genuine experimental result from an experimental artifact. My analysis construes experimental results as the outcomes of inferences from the data that take material background assumptions as auxiliary premises. Artifacts occur when one or more of these background assumptions are false, such that the data do not reliably serve the purposes they were generated for. I conclude by laying out the ways in which my analysis of data quality is relevant to, and informed by, recent debates about the replicability of experimental results.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13
JournalEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Science
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Feb 2022

Keywords

  • Data reliability
  • Experimental artifacts
  • Experimental inferences
  • Philosophy of data
  • Philosophy of psychology
  • Reactivity
  • Replication crisis

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Philosophy
  • History and Philosophy of Science

Cite this