4.2 Article

The persistent sampling bias in developmental psychology: A call to action

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 162, Issue -, Pages 31-38

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2017.04.017

Keywords

WEIRD data; Cross-cultural research; Generalizable data; Representative data; Developmental science; Diversity; Cultural psychology; Developmental psychology

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP140101410]

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Psychology must confront the bias in its broad literature toward the study of participants developing in environments unrepresentative of the vast majority of the world's population. Here, we focus on the implications of addressing this challenge, highlight the need to address overreliance on a narrow participant pool, and emphasize the value and necessity of conducting research with diverse populations. We show that high-impact-factor developmental journals are heavily skewed toward publishing articles with data from WEIRD (Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic) populations. Most critically, despite calls for change and supposed widespread awareness of this problem, there is a habitual dependence on convenience sampling and little evidence that the discipline is making any meaningful movement toward drawing from diverse samples. Failure to confront the possibility that culturally specific findings are being misattributed as universal traits has broad implications for the construction of scientifically defensible theories and for the reliable public dissemination of study findings. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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