“…Inviting the initial author to review replication studies can help reduce this, and (in the case of a Registered Report) the initial authors can be invited to provide a Stage 1 review before data collection (see Marsden, Morgan-Short, Trofimovich, & Ellis, 2018). Even more transparent practices that may promote more and higher quality replication, reduce publication bias, and reduce perceptions of bullying include (a) publishing open reviews and authors' responses to reviews (e.g., in BMC Psychology; Laws, 2016); (b) giving initial authors an automatic right to a peer-reviewed published commentary (e.g., in Perspectives in Psychological Science; in our sample, we found one such example, Kanno, 2000); and (c) adversarial collaborations (Coyne, 2016;Kahneman, 2014;Koole & Lakens, 2012;Mellers, Hertwig, & Kahneman, 2001), where researchers who account for phenomena differently agree to work together following a single protocol. We raise awareness of the existence of these more extreme measures but hope that the other mechanisms that we recommend, such as transparent materials and data and the reviewing of methods prior to data collection, serve to reduce any perception of bullying that independent replication may engender.…”