Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 30, 2014 · Nosek investigates the gap between values and practices — such as when behavior is influenced by factors other than one’s intentions and goals. This work has been applied to research on diverse topics, including implicit bias, diversity and inclusion, automaticity, social judgment and decision-making, attitudes, beliefs, ideology, morality ...

  2. May 2, 2018 · One of the founding fathers of the replication crisis-turned-reformation, Professor Brian Nosek, opened the 2018 British Psychological Society Annual Conference with a startling picture of how our science has changed in a few short years.

  3. Nov 3, 2020 · Like some of my other interlocutors, Brian Nosek became a psychologist by accident. When he entered the psychology field, he was a computer engineering undergraduate. Toward the end of his third year he enrolled in psychology classes as a break from the really hard courses.

    • Tomasz Witkowski
    • witkowski@moderator.edu.pl
    • 2020
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Brian_NosekBrian Nosek - Wikipedia

    Brian Arthur Nosek is an American social-cognitive psychologist, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, and the co-founder and director of the Center for Open Science. [1] He also co-founded the Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science and Project Implicit.

  5. Nosek received his undergraduate degree in Psychology with minors in Computer Science and Women’s Studies from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo in 1995, and his PhD in Psychology from Yale in 2002. He received honorary doctorates in science from Ghent University (2019) and University of Bristol (2022).

  6. Brian led the pioneering Reproducibility Project: Psychology – building a vast international team of collaborators to attempt to replicate, as closely as possible, one hundred findings published in three major psychology journals.

  7. People also ask

  8. Aug 27, 2015 · Over the last three years, the psychologist from the University of Virginia persuaded some 270 of his peers to channel their free time into repeating 100 published psychological experiments to...

  1. People also search for