Matias Fjeldmark’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


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Taboos and Self-Censorship Among U.S. Psychology Professors
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May 2024

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472 Reads

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4 Citations

Perspectives on Psychological Science

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Matias Fjeldmark

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We identify points of conflict and consensus regarding (a) controversial empirical claims and (b) normative preferences for how controversial scholarship—and scholars—should be treated. In 2021, we conducted qualitative interviews ( n = 41) to generate a quantitative survey ( N = 470) of U.S. psychology professors’ beliefs and values. Professors strongly disagreed on the truth status of 10 candidate taboo conclusions: For each conclusion, some professors reported 100% certainty in its veracity and others 100% certainty in its falsehood. Professors more confident in the truth of the taboo conclusions reported more self-censorship, a pattern that could bias perceived scientific consensus regarding the inaccuracy of controversial conclusions. Almost all professors worried about social sanctions if they were to express their own empirical beliefs. Tenured professors reported as much self-censorship and as much fear of consequences as untenured professors, including fear of getting fired. Most professors opposed suppressing scholarship and punishing peers on the basis of moral concerns about research conclusions and reported contempt for peers who petition to retract papers on moral grounds. Younger, more left-leaning, and female faculty were generally more opposed to controversial scholarship. These results do not resolve empirical or normative disagreements among psychology professors, but they may provide an empirical context for their discussion.

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Citations (1)


... Even Larry Sanger (2020), one of the co-founders of Wikipedia, stated that "Wikipedia's NPOV (Neutral Point of View) is dead" and supports his statement with a variety of Wikipedia pages on politics, religion, and science. Anonymous surveys have previously indicated that opinions that are commonly labeled as scientific consensus are not actually so when experts are asked in private (Clark et al., 2024;Horowitz et al., 2019;Rindermann et al., 2020;Snyderman & Rothman, 1988). Because one of the core Wikipedia policies concerning science pertains to consensus among experts, such anonymous surveys are very important in determining the true views of experts, rather than their publicly expressed views. ...

Reference:

The Politics of the World Encyclopedia. A Study of Political Leanings of the Wikipedia User Base
Taboos and Self-Censorship Among U.S. Psychology Professors

Perspectives on Psychological Science