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This synthesis is an attempt to characterize the overall change and rate of change in psychology on doing replications and behaviors associated with improving replicability using self-report and audit studies. **Behaviors that undermine replicability (QRP)** We conducted a literature search for articles that assessed ten QRP behaviors: 1. not reporting all DVs, 2. deciding to collect more data after checking significance, 3. not reporting all study conditions, 4. stopping data collection early once a desired result is obtained, 5. rounding p-values to obtain significance, 6. selectively reporting studies that worked, 7. excluding data, 8. HARKing, 9. generalizing to untested demographics, and 10. falsifying data. **Behaviors that support replicability** We conducted a literature search for articles that assessed behaviors relating to three open science practices: sharing data, sharing materials, preregistration. We were specifically interested in surveys that asked whether the respondent had engaged in these practices, rather than surveys that reported on attitudes toward those behaviors or intentions to do the behavior in the future.
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