There have been a lot of such manifestos, so it will be pretty hard to isolate the effects of any particular one.
Such manifestos can be divided into two classes: those which set p-values in opposition to confidence intervals and those that describe them as the same. The first class has a positive suggestion: use confidence intervals. It seems to me that positive manifestos are more likely to be adopted than those which merely condemn p-values, but offer no alternative. This manifesto seems to condemn confidence intervals, but makes the very vague suggestion to pay attention to effect sizes. In the end, maybe that amounts to the same thing.
There have been a lot of such manifestos, so it will be pretty hard to isolate the effects of any particular one.
Such manifestos can be divided into two classes: those which set p-values in opposition to confidence intervals and those that describe them as the same. The first class has a positive suggestion: use confidence intervals. It seems to me that positive manifestos are more likely to be adopted than those which merely condemn p-values, but offer no alternative. This manifesto seems to condemn confidence intervals, but makes the very vague suggestion to pay attention to effect sizes. In the end, maybe that amounts to the same thing.