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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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Cairns, Maxwell; Prendergast, Luke A. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
As a measure of heterogeneity in meta-analysis, the coefficient of variation (CV) has been recently considered, providing researchers with a complement to the very popular I[superscript 2] measure. While I[superscript 2] measures the proportion of total variance that is due to variance of the random effects, the CV is the ratio of the standard…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Intervals, Computation
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Hansen, Spencer; Rice, Kenneth – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Meta-analysis of proportions is conceptually simple: Faced with a binary outcome in multiple studies, we seek inference on some overall proportion of successes/failures. Under common effect models, exact inference has long been available, but is not when we more realistically allow for heterogeneity of the proportions. Instead a wide range of…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Effect Size, Statistical Inference, Intervals
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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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Siegel, Lianne; Chu, Haitao – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Reference intervals, or reference ranges, aid medical decision-making by containing a pre-specified proportion (e.g., 95%) of the measurements in a representative healthy population. We recently proposed three approaches for estimating a reference interval from a meta-analysis based on a random effects model: a frequentist approach, a Bayesian…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Meta Analysis, Intervals, Decision Making
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Jacobs, Perke; Viechtbauer, Wolfgang – Research Synthesis Methods, 2017
Meta-analyses are often used to synthesize the findings of studies examining the correlational relationship between two continuous variables. When only dichotomous measurements are available for one of the two variables, the biserial correlation coefficient can be used to estimate the product-moment correlation between the two underlying…
Descriptors: Sampling, Correlation, Meta Analysis, Measurement
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Jackson, Dan; Bowden, Jack; Baker, Rose – Research Synthesis Methods, 2015
Moment-based estimators of the between-study variance are very popular when performing random effects meta-analyses. This type of estimation has many advantages including computational and conceptual simplicity. Furthermore, by using these estimators in large samples, valid meta-analyses can be performed without the assumption that the treatment…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Computation, Evaluation Methods