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Tonidandel, Scott; LeBreton, James M.; Johnson, Jeff W. – Psychological Methods, 2009
Relative weight analysis is a procedure for estimating the relative importance of correlated predictors in a regression equation. Because the sampling distribution of relative weights is unknown, researchers using relative weight analysis are unable to make judgments regarding the statistical significance of the relative weights. J. W. Johnson…
Descriptors: Multiple Regression Analysis, Statistical Significance, Statistical Inference, Bias
Serlin, Ronald C.; Harwell, Michael R. – Psychological Methods, 2004
It is well-known that for normally distributed errors parametric tests are optimal statistically, but perhaps less well-known is that when normality does not hold, nonparametric tests frequently possess greater statistical power than parametric tests, while controlling Type I error rate. However, the use of nonparametric procedures has been…
Descriptors: Multiple Regression Analysis, Monte Carlo Methods, Nonparametric Statistics, Error Patterns
Long, Jeffrey D. – Psychological Methods, 2005
Often quantitative data in the social sciences have only ordinal justification. Problems of interpretation can arise when least squares multiple regression (LSMR) is used with ordinal data. Two ordinal alternatives are discussed, dominance-based ordinal multiple regression (DOMR) and proportional odds multiple regression. The Q[superscript 2]…
Descriptors: Simulation, Social Science Research, Error of Measurement, Least Squares Statistics