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Reverse-Bayes methods for evidence assessment and research synthesis

Journal

RESEARCH SYNTHESIS METHODS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 295-314

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jrsm.1538

Keywords

Analysis of Credibility; Bayes factor; false positive risk; meta-analysis; prior-data conflict; Reverse-Bayes

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [189295]

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It is widely believed that the current inferential toolkit used in scientific research is inadequate, and there is no consensus on alternative methods. A new Reverse-Bayes approach has been proposed to address the longstanding issues in Bayesian analysis, potentially providing solutions to inferential challenges and making Bayesian methods more accessible and attractive for evidence assessment.
It is now widely accepted that the standard inferential toolkit used by the scientific research community-null-hypothesis significance testing (NHST)-is not fit for purpose. Yet despite the threat posed to the scientific enterprise, there is no agreement concerning alternative approaches for evidence assessment. This lack of consensus reflects long-standing issues concerning Bayesian methods, the principal alternative to NHST. We report on recent work that builds on an approach to inference put forward over 70 years ago to address the well-known Problem of Priors in Bayesian analysis, by reversing the conventional prior-likelihood-posterior (forward) use of Bayes' theorem. Such Reverse-Bayes analysis allows priors to be deduced from the likelihood by requiring that the posterior achieve a specified level of credibility. We summarise the technical underpinning of this approach, and show how it opens up new approaches to common inferential challenges, such as assessing the credibility of scientific findings, setting them in appropriate context, estimating the probability of successful replications, and extracting more insight from NHST while reducing the risk of misinterpretation. We argue that Reverse-Bayes methods have a key role to play in making Bayesian methods more accessible and attractive for evidence assessment and research synthesis. As a running example we consider a recently published meta-analysis from several randomised controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the association between corticosteroids and mortality in hospitalised patients with COVID-19.

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