Put your money where your mouth is: Incentivizing the truth my making nonreplicability costly

Abstract

We argue that every published result should be backed by an author-issued ‘nonreplication bounty’: an amount of money the author is willing to pay if their result fails to replicate. We contrast the virtuous incentives and signals that arise in such a system with the confluence of factors that provide incentives to streamline publication of the low-confidence results that have precipitated the current replicability crisis in psychology

Publication
European Journal of Personality