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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Michael Borenstein – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
In any meta-analysis, it is critically important to report the dispersion in effects as well as the mean effect. If an intervention has a moderate clinical impact "on average" we also need to know if the impact is moderate for all relevant populations, or if it varies from trivial in some to major in others. Or indeed, if the…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Error Patterns, Statistical Analysis, Intervention
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Brinley N. Zabriskie; Nolan Cole; Jacob Baldauf; Craig Decker – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses have become the gold standard for synthesizing evidence from multiple clinical trials, and they are especially useful when outcomes are rare or adverse since individual trials often lack sufficient power to detect a treatment effect. However, when zero events are observed in one or both treatment arms in a trial, commonly used…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Error Correction, Computation, Simulation
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Turner, Simon Lee; Korevaar, Elizabeth; Cumpston, Miranda S.; Kanukula, Raju; Forbes, Andrew B.; McKenzie, Joanne E. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Interrupted time series (ITS) studies are frequently used to examine the impact of population-level interventions or exposures. Systematic reviews with meta-analyses including ITS designs may inform public health and policy decision-making. Re-analysis of ITS may be required for inclusion in meta-analysis. While publications of ITS rarely provide…
Descriptors: Quasiexperimental Design, Graphs, Accuracy, Computation
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Stanley, T. D.; Doucouliagos, Hristos – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Partial correlation coefficients are often used as effect sizes in the meta-analysis and systematic review of multiple regression analysis research results. There are two well-known formulas for the variance and thereby for the standard error (SE) of partial correlation coefficients (PCC). One is considered the "correct" variance in the…
Descriptors: Correlation, Statistical Bias, Error Patterns, Error Correction
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Prathiba Natesan Batley; Erica B. McClure; Brandy Brewer; Ateka A. Contractor; Nicholas John Batley; Larry Vernon Hedges; Stephanie Chin – Grantee Submission, 2023
N-of-1 trials, a special case of Single Case Experimental Designs (SCEDs), are prominent in clinical medical research and specifically psychiatry due to the growing significance of precision/personalized medicine. It is imperative that these clinical trials be conducted, and their data analyzed, using the highest standards to guard against threats…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Research Design, Data Analysis, Effect Size
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Warne, Russell T. – Journal of Advanced Academics, 2022
Recently, Picho-Kiroga (2021) published a meta-analysis on the effect of stereotype threat on females. Their conclusion was that the average effect size for stereotype threat studies was d = .28, but that effects are overstated because the majority of studies on stereotype threat in females include methodological characteristics that inflate the…
Descriptors: Sex Stereotypes, Females, Meta Analysis, Effect Size
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Taylor, Charlie – MEXTESOL Journal, 2023
Whether or not to teach grammar explicitly is an issue that has long been debated in the field of SLA. There seems to be a growing consensus among many researchers now in support of embedding some element of explicit instruction within a communicative curriculum. The main arguments in support of explicit instruction are threefold: two widely cited…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Meta Analysis, Grammar, Second Language Learning
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Rickard, Timothy C.; Pan, Steven C.; Gupta, Mohan W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
We explored the possibility of publication bias in the sleep and explicit motor sequence learning literature by applying precision effect test (PET) and precision effect test with standard errors (PEESE) weighted regression analyses to the 88 effect sizes from a recent comprehensive literature review (Pan & Rickard, 2015). Basic PET analysis…
Descriptors: Publications, Bias, Sleep, Psychomotor Skills
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Park, Sunyoung; Beretvas, S. Natasha – Journal of Experimental Education, 2019
The log-odds ratio (ln[OR]) is commonly used to quantify treatments' effects on dichotomous outcomes and then pooled across studies using inverse-variance (1/v) weights. Calculation of the ln[OR]'s variance requires four cell frequencies for two groups crossed with values for dichotomous outcomes. While primary studies report the total sample size…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Meta Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Efficiency
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Doleman, Brett; Freeman, Suzanne C.; Lund, Jonathan N.; Williams, John P.; Sutton, Alex J. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2020
This study aimed to determine for continuous outcomes dependent on baseline risk, whether funnel plot asymmetry may be due to statistical artefact rather than publication bias and evaluate a novel test to resolve this. Firstly, we conducted assessment for publication bias in nine meta-analyses of postoperative analgesics (344 trials with 25 348…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Treatment, Risk, Publications, Bias
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Cristia, Alejandrina; Bulgarelli, Federica; Bergelson, Elika – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: The Language Environment Analysis (LENA) system provides automated measures facilitating clinical and nonclinical research and interventions on language development, but there are only a few, scattered independent reports of these measures' validity. The objectives of the current systematic review were to (a) discover studies comparing…
Descriptors: Intervention, Measures (Individuals), Language Acquisition, Accuracy
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Martella, Amedee Marchand; Yatcilla, Jane Kinkus; Martella, Ronald C.; Marchand-Martella, Nancy E.; Ozen, Zafer; Karatas, Tugce; Park, Helen H.; Simpson, Alexandra; Karpicke, Jeffrey D. – Review of Educational Research, 2021
When previous research is cited incorrectly, misinformation can infiltrate scientific discourse and undermine scholarly knowledge. One of the more damaging citation issues involves incorrectly citing article content (called quotation errors); therefore, investigating quotation accuracy is an important research endeavor. One field where quotation…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Citations (References), Accuracy, Error Patterns
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Maeda, Yukiko; Harwell, Michael R. – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2016
The "Q" test is regularly used in meta-analysis to examine variation in effect sizes. However, the assumptions of "Q" are unlikely to be satisfied in practice prompting methodological researchers to conduct computer simulation studies examining its statistical properties. Narrative summaries of this literature are available but…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Q Methodology, Effect Size, Research Methodology
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Polanin, Joshua R.; Pigott, Terri D. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2015
Meta-analysis multiplicity, the concept of conducting multiple tests of statistical significance within one review, is an underdeveloped literature. We address this issue by considering how Type I errors can impact meta-analytic results, suggest how statistical power may be affected through the use of multiplicity corrections, and propose how…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Statistical Significance, Error Patterns, Research Methodology
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Mullet, Dianna R.; Rinn, Anne N. – Roeper Review, 2015
Many gifted characteristics overlap the symptoms of attention deficity-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The potential for the misdiagnosis of giftedness as ADHD exists, but so does the potential for a dual diagnosis of giftedness and ADHD. A decade after the misdiagnosis of giftedness as ADHD was first investigated we examine lessons learned…
Descriptors: Gifted, Ability Identification, Disability Identification, Educational Diagnosis
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