New publication | Computational Reproducibility in Finance: Evidence from 1,000 Tests

The exact same results could only be computationally reproduced 52% of the time based on the researchers’ code for more than 1,000 tests of six research questions in empirical finance. Anna Dreber Almenberg and Magnus Johannesson, Professors at the Department of Economics at SSE, and co-authors publish a new article in the Review of Financial Studies.

Dreber and Johannesson with co-authors analyzed the computational reproducibility of more than 1,000 tests of six research questions in finance provided by 168 research teams. Computational reproducibility implies testing if the data and code provided by the researchers yield the same results as reported by the researchers. The exact same results could only be computationally reproduced for 52% of the tests. Computational reproducibility is not related to the “academic quality” of the researchers or peer-review ratings, but improves with better coding skills, more effort, and less complex code. Researchers are overconfident in assessing the computational reproducibility of their own work. The article also provides guidelines for finance researchers to improve computational reproducibility.