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Noma, Hisashi; Hamura, Yasuyuki; Gosho, Masahiko; Furukawa, Toshi A. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Network meta-analysis has been an essential methodology of systematic reviews for comparative effectiveness research. The restricted maximum likelihood (REML) method is one of the current standard inference methods for multivariate, contrast-based meta-analysis models, but recent studies have revealed the resultant confidence intervals of average…
Descriptors: Network Analysis, Meta Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Error of Measurement
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Ross, Steven J.; Mackey, Beth – Language Learning, 2015
This chapter introduces three applications of Bayesian inference to common and novel issues in second language research. After a review of the critiques of conventional hypothesis testing, our focus centers on ways Bayesian inference can be used for dealing with missing data, for testing theory-driven substantive hypotheses without a default null…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Hypothesis Testing, Meta Analysis, Inferences
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Ridley, Charles R.; Shaw-Ridley, Mary – Counseling Psychologist, 2009
Clinical judgment is foundational to psychological practice. Accurate judgment forms the basis for establishing reasonable goals and selecting appropriate treatments, which in turn are essential in achieving positive therapeutic outcomes. Therefore, Spengler and colleagues' meta-analytic finding--clinical judgment accuracy improves marginally with…
Descriptors: Medical Evaluation, Clinical Experience, Inferences, Therapy
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Harwell, Michael; Maeda, Yukiko – Journal of Experimental Education, 2008
There is general agreement that meta-analysis is an important tool for synthesizing study results in quantitative educational research. Yet, a shared feature of many meta-analyses is a failure to report sufficient information for readers to fully judge the reported findings, such as the populations to which generalizations are to be made,…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Meta Analysis, Research Methodology, Statistical Analysis
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Keown, Kiera; Van Eerd, Dwayne; Irvin, Emma – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2008
Knowledge transfer and exchange is the process of increasing the awareness and use of research evidence in policy or practice decision making by nonresearch audiences or stakeholders. One way to accomplish this end is through ongoing interaction between researchers and interested nonresearch audiences, which provides an opportunity for the two…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Technology Transfer, Information Transfer, Policy Formation
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Nind, Melanie – London Review of Education, 2006
The evaluation of systematic review as part of the evidence-based or evidence-informed practice movement is a dominant theme in current debates in educational research. This article contributes to the debate by offering a personal, reflexive narrative on the process of doing systematic review, relating some of the arguments regarding the merits…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Literature Reviews, Personal Narratives
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Moxley, Roy A. – Behavior Analyst, 2005
Ernst Mach is most closely associated with a positivism that demanded a language of close contact with reality. Mach linked this view with the tradition of the quest for an ideal language in which meaning is a property of a word. Logical positivism and the S-R psychology of the early B. F. Skinner also participated in this ideal-language…
Descriptors: Psychology, Verbal Stimuli, Pragmatics, Behavior Theories
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Stevenson, John – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2005
This article explores the concept of the "vocational" in contemporary educational discourses, and argues for the centrality of vocational aspects of learning in making meaning. The existing tensions are seen to lie between discourses that place the vocational at the bottom of a hierarchy of knowledge and value, and discourses concerning…
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Meta Analysis, Vocational Education, Background