#1589 | ResearchBox

ResearchBox #1589 - 'Replication of two studies from Behavioral nudges reduce failure to appear for court (Science Fishbane, Ouss S'


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  Study Materials & Supplementals.pdf



  Study 3 - AsPredicted #123477.pdf


  


  study_3_dataset.csv



  study_3_analyses.pdf



  study_3_analyses.jasp



  Study 4 - AsPredicted #123478.pdf


  


  study_4_dataset.csv



  study_4_analyses.pdf



  study_4_analyses.jasp


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BOX INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY FILES FOR
Vanessa Blake, 'Report #4: Replication of “Behavioral nudges reduce failure to appear for court” (Science | Fishbane, Ouss & Shah, 2020)', Transparent Replications by Clearer Thinking
https://replications.clearerthinking.org/replication-2020science370-6517/

CITING THIS RESEARCHBOX
Harris, C., Blake, V., Metskas, A., & Greenberg, S. (2025). ResearchBox 1589, 'Replication of two studies from Behavioral nudges reduce failure to appear for court (Science Fishbane, Ouss S', https://ResearchBox.org/1589. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15039351

LICENSE FOR USE
All content posted to ResearchBox is under a CC By 4.0 License (all use is allowed as long as authorship of the content is attributed). When using content from ResearchBox please cite the original work, and provide a link to the URL for this box (https://researchbox.org/1589).

BOX PUBLIC SINCE
June 22, 2023   

BOX CREATORS
Clare Harris (clare.harris@uqconnect.edu.au)
Vanessa Blake (vanessa.w.blake@outlook.com)
Amanda Metskas (metskas@gmail.com)
Spencer Greenberg (spencer.g.greenberg@gmail.com)

ABSTRACT
We ran replications of studies three (3) and four (4) from this paper. These studies found that: * People have less support for behavioral nudges (such as sending reminders about appointment times) to prevent failures to appear in court than to address other kinds of missed appointments * People view missing court as more likely be be intentional, and less likely to be due to forgetting, compared to other kinds of missed appointments * The belief that skipping court is intentional drives people to support behavioral nudges less than if they believed it was unintentional We successfully replicated the results of studies 3 and 4. Transparency was strong due to study materials and data being publicly available, but neither study being pre-registered was a weakness. Overall the studies were clear in their analysis choices and explanations, but clarity could have benefited from more discussion of alternative explanations and the potential for results to change over time.