Beyond significance testing [electronic resource] : statistics reform in the behavioral sciences / Rex B. Kline.
By: Kline, Rex B.
Publisher: Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association, c2013Edition: 2nd ed.Description: xi, 349 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.ISBN: 9781433812781 (electronic bk.); 1433812789 (electronic bk.).Subject(s): Psychometrics | PsychometricsAdditional physical formats: OriginalDDC classification: 150.72/4 Online resources: Fulltext available via EBSCOhost - Shibboleth login required Also issued in print.Summary: "Part I is concerned with fundamental concepts and summarizes the significance testing controversy. Outlined in Chapter 1 is the rationale of statistics reform. The history of the controversy about significance testing in psychology and other disciplines is recounted in this chapter. Principles of sampling and estimation that underlie confidence intervals and statistical tests are reviewed in Chapter 2. The logic and illogic of significance testing is considered in Chapter 3, and misunderstandings about p values are elaborated in Chapter 4. The purpose of Chapters 3-4 is to help you to understand critical weaknesses of statistical tests. Part II comprises four chapters about effect size estimation in comparative studies, where at least two different groups or conditions are contrasted. In Chapter 5, the rationale of effect size estimation is outlined and basic effect sizes for continuous outcomes are introduced. The problem of evaluating substantive significance is also considered. Effect sizes for categorical outcomes, such as relapsed versus not relapsed, are covered in Chapter 6. Chapters 7 and 8 concern effect size estimation in, respectively, single-factor designs with at least three conditions and factorial designs with two or more factors and continuous outcomes. Many empirical examples are offered in Part II. There are exercises for Chapters 2-8 and suggested answers are available on the book's website. Part III includes two chapters that cover alternatives to significance testing. Chapter 9 deals with replication and meta-analysis. The main points of this chapter are that a larger role for replication will require a cultural change in the behavioral sciences and that meta-analysis is an important tool for research synthesis but is no substitute for explicit replication. Bayesian estimation is the subject of Chapter 10. Bayesian statistics are overlooked in psychology research, but this approach offers an inference framework consistent with many goals of statistics reform. Best practice recommendations are also summarized in this chapter"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Rev ed. of: Beyond significance testing : reforming data analysis methods in behavioral research. c2004.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Part I is concerned with fundamental concepts and summarizes the significance testing controversy. Outlined in Chapter 1 is the rationale of statistics reform. The history of the controversy about significance testing in psychology and other disciplines is recounted in this chapter. Principles of sampling and estimation that underlie confidence intervals and statistical tests are reviewed in Chapter 2. The logic and illogic of significance testing is considered in Chapter 3, and misunderstandings about p values are elaborated in Chapter 4. The purpose of Chapters 3-4 is to help you to understand critical weaknesses of statistical tests. Part II comprises four chapters about effect size estimation in comparative studies, where at least two different groups or conditions are contrasted. In Chapter 5, the rationale of effect size estimation is outlined and basic effect sizes for continuous outcomes are introduced. The problem of evaluating substantive significance is also considered. Effect sizes for categorical outcomes, such as relapsed versus not relapsed, are covered in Chapter 6. Chapters 7 and 8 concern effect size estimation in, respectively, single-factor designs with at least three conditions and factorial designs with two or more factors and continuous outcomes. Many empirical examples are offered in Part II. There are exercises for Chapters 2-8 and suggested answers are available on the book's website. Part III includes two chapters that cover alternatives to significance testing. Chapter 9 deals with replication and meta-analysis. The main points of this chapter are that a larger role for replication will require a cultural change in the behavioral sciences and that meta-analysis is an important tool for research synthesis but is no substitute for explicit replication. Bayesian estimation is the subject of Chapter 10. Bayesian statistics are overlooked in psychology research, but this approach offers an inference framework consistent with many goals of statistics reform. Best practice recommendations are also summarized in this chapter"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).
Also issued in print.
Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association, 2014. Available via World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreement. s2014 dcunns
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