Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science

Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science
FormationJuly 6, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-07-06)
TypeScientific society
Legal status501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
Websitehttps://improvingpsych.org/

The Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science (SIPS) is a professional organization created in response to the replication crisis in social psychology.[1][2][3] It was founded at its inaugural meeting that took place June 6-8th, 2016 at Center for Open Science in Charlottesville.

It is a service organization with the aims of improving the training and research practices of psychological scientists, improving institutional policies and norms to promote better scientific practices, carrying out empirical testing of current scientific practices, and conducting outreach within and outside the field.[4]

It holds a yearly conference and publishes the journal Collabra: Psychology.[5]

Awards

The SIPS committee bestows two types of awards to projects that further the SIPS mission: the SIPS Mission Awards (once per year) and the SIPS Commendations (three times per year).[6]

References

  1. ^ Resnick, Brian (13 June 2018). "The Stanford Prison Experiment was massively influential. We just learned it was a fraud". Vox.
  2. ^ Jussim, Lee (14 December 2017). "Toward a More Self-Correcting Psychological Science". Psychology Today.
  3. ^ Chartier, C. R.; Kline, M.; McCarthy, R. J.; Nuijten, M. B.; Dunleavy, D.; Ledgerwood, A. (2018). "The Cooperative Revolution is Making Psychological Science Better". PsyArXiv.
  4. ^ "Mission Statement". Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science.
  5. ^ "Collabra: Psychology. University of California Press".
  6. ^ "SIPS Awards". Retrieved 21 August 2022.