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EEGManyPipelines: A large-scale, grassroots multi-analyst study of electroencephalography analysis practices in the wild

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Trübutschek,  Darinka       
Research Group Neural Circuits, Consciousness, and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Max Planck Society;

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ncc-24-tru-01-EEGManyPipelines.pdf
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Citation

Trübutschek, D., Yang, Y.-F., Gianelli, C., Cesnaite, E., Fischer, N. L., Vinding, M. C., et al. (2041). EEGManyPipelines: A large-scale, grassroots multi-analyst study of electroencephalography analysis practices in the wild. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 36(2), 217-224. doi:10.1162/jocn_a_02087.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000E-68AD-B
Abstract
The ongoing reproducibility crisis in psychology and cognitive neuroscience has sparked increasing calls to re-evaluate and reshape scientific culture and practices. Heeding those calls, we have recently launched the EEGManyPipelines project as a means to assess the robustness of EEG research in naturalistic conditions and experiment with an alternative model of conducting scientific research. One hundred sixty-eight analyst teams, encompassing 396 individual researchers from 37 countries, independently analyzed the same unpublished, representative EEG data set to test the same set of predefined hypotheses and then provided their analysis pipelines and reported outcomes. Here, we lay out how large-scale scientific projects can be set up in a grassroots, community-driven manner without a central organizing laboratory. We explain our recruitment strategy, our guidance for analysts, the eventual outputs of this project, and how it might have a lasting impact on the field.