Peer-Reviewed

Publications

 

See Google Scholar for an up-to-date list of my publications and citations & Altmetric Explorer for a summary of media attention to my work.

 

2023


Schaerer, M., Du Plessis, C., … Tiokhin, L., … Gender Audits Forecasting Collaboration. On the trajectory of discrimination: A meta-analysis and forecasting survey capturing 44 years of field experiments on gender and hiring decisions. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes.

Tiokhin, L., Panchanathan, K., Smaldino, P., Lakens, D. Shifting the level of selection in science. Perspectives on Pychological Science.

Van Ravenzwaaij, D., Bakker, M., … Tiokhin, L., … Wagenmakers, E.J. Perspectives on scientific error. Royal Society Open Science.

 

2022


Anvari, F., Kievit, R., …Tiokhin, L., Wieknik, B., Orben, A. Not all effects are indispensable: Psychological science requires verifiable lines of reasoning for whether an effect matters. Perspectives on Pychological Science.

 

2021


Scheel, A., Tiokhin, L., Isager, P., Lakens, D. Why hypothesis testers should spend less time testing hypotheses. Perspectives on Pychological Science.

Tiokhin, L., Panchanathan, K., Lakens, D., Vazire, S., Morgan, TJH., Zollman, K. Honest signaling in academic publishing. PLOS One

Tiokhin, L., Yan, M., Morgan, TJH. Competition for priority harms the reliability of science, but reforms can help. Nature Human Behaviour.

Behind the Paper in Nature magazine. Press coverage in Science magazine.

Wu, J., Szmad, S., Barclay, P., …Tiokhin, L., Van Lange, P. Honesty and dishonesty in gossip strategies: A fitness interdependence analysis. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

This paper was awarded the Ig Nobel Prize in 2022.
 

2020


Landy, J. F., Jia, M., Ding I. L., ...Tiokhin, L. ... Uhlmann, E. L. Crowdsourcing hypothesis tests: Making transparent how design choices shape research results. Psychological Bulletin.

 

2019


Tiokhin, L., Derex, M. Competition for novelty reduces information sampling in a research game - a registered report. Royal Society Open Science. 

*Tiokhin, L., *Hackman, J., Munira, S., Jesmin, K., *Hruschka, D. Generalizability is not optional: Insights from a cross-cultural study of social discounting. Royal Society Open Science. *Equal contributions.

 

2018


Hruschka, D., Munira, S., Jesmin, K., Hackman, J., Tiokhin, L. Learning from failures of protocol in cross-cultural research.* Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. *This paper results from an Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium.

Coles, N., Tiokhin, L., Scheel, A., Isager, P., Lakens, D. The Costs and Benefits of Replication Studies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

*Frankenhuis, W. E., *Tiokhin, L. Bridging evolutionary biology and developmental psychology: Toward an enduring theoretical infrastructure. Child Development. *Equal contributions.

 

2017


Tiokhin, L., Hruschka, D. No evidence that an Ebola outbreak influenced voting preferences in the 2014 elections after controlling for time-series autocorrelation: a commentary on Beall, Hofer, and Schaller (2016). Psychological Science.

 

2016


Tiokhin, L. Do symptoms of illness serve signaling functions? (Hint: Yes). The Quarterly Review of Biology.

 

2014


Fessler, D.M.T., Holbrook, C., Tiokhin, L., & Snyder J. Sizing up Helen: Nonviolent physical risk-taking enhances the envisioned bodily formidability of women. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology

Fessler, D.M.T., Tiokhin, L., Holbrook, C., Gervais, M., & Snyder J. Foundations of The Crazy Bastard Hypothesis: Nonviolent physical risk-taking enhances conceptualized formidability. Evolution & Human Behavior.

 

2011


Snyder, J., Fessler, D.M.T., Tiokhin, L., Frederick, D., Lee, S.W., & Navarrete, C.D. Trade-offs in a dangerous world: Women’s fear of crime predicts preferences for aggressive and formidable mates. Evolution & Human Behavior.