The author discusses some of his experiences concerning mutual trust, fear of repercussions, and the bystander effect as conditions limiting revelation of colleagues' possible integrity breaches. He explains why people are unable to mimic real data and why data fabrication using statistical models stills falls short of credibility. Confirmatory and exploratory research and the usefulness of preregistration, and the counter-intuitivenature of statistics, are discussed.
The author questions the usefulness of statistical advice concerning frequentist hypothesis testing, Bayes-factor use, alternative statistics education, and reduction of situational disturbances like performance pressure, as stand-alone means to reduce questionable research practices when researchers lack experience with statistics.
An interview with the author can be found here: https://www.tilburguniversity.edu/magazine/overview/former-rector-sijtsma-turn-statistician-fight-fraud-and-sloppiness.
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- Lex Bouter, Professor Emeritus of Methodology and Integrity, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
"Sijtsma's book is of interest to anybody interested in open science and to all methodologists. He points out problems and then provides concrete solutions. As a member of the book's target audience, I finished the book in a few sittings and highly recommend it."
- Eric-Jan Wagenmakers in Chance, October 2024
"[This book] is well written and readable, but it is also statistical rather than journalistic, despite being an inside view of a major news event. I wholeheartedly agree with the practical recommendations the author makes, on research transparency, on statistical approaches, and on the importance of statistical education."
- Catherine Saunders in Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society, August 2024








