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Lane, David M.; Sandor, Aniko – Psychological Methods, 2009
Statistical graphs are commonly used in scientific publications. Unfortunately, graphs in psychology journals rarely portray distributional information beyond central tendency, and few graphs portray inferential statistics. Moreover, those that do portray inferential information generally do not portray it in a way that is useful for interpreting…
Descriptors: Graphs, Charts, Design, Statistics
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Deboeck, Pascal R.; Montpetit, Mignon A.; Bergeman, C. S.; Boker, Steven M. – Psychological Methods, 2009
The study of intraindividual variability is central to the study of individuals in psychology. Previous research has related the variance observed in repeated measurements (time series) of individuals to traitlike measures that are logically related. Intraindividual measures, such as intraindividual standard deviation or the coefficient of…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Individual Differences, Measures (Individuals), Probability
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Cumming, Geoff – Psychological Methods, 2010
This comment offers three descriptions of "p[subscript rep]" that start with a frequentist account of confidence intervals, draw on R. A. Fisher's fiducial argument, and do not make Bayesian assumptions. Links are described among "p[subscript rep]," "p" values, and the probability a confidence interval will capture…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Measurement Techniques, Research Methodology, Validity
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Rodriguez, Michael C.; Maeda, Yukiko – Psychological Methods, 2006
The meta-analysis of coefficient alpha across many studies is becoming more common in psychology by a methodology labeled reliability generalization. Existing reliability generalization studies have not used the sampling distribution of coefficient alpha for precision weighting and other common meta-analytic procedures. A framework is provided for…
Descriptors: Generalization, Sampling, Reliability, Meta Analysis
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Cumming, Geoff; Maillardet, Robert – Psychological Methods, 2006
Confidence intervals (CIs) give information about replication, but many researchers have misconceptions about this information. One problem is that the percentage of future replication means captured by a particular CI varies markedly, depending on where in relation to the population mean that CI falls. The authors investigated the distribution of…
Descriptors: Intervals, Misconceptions, Mathematical Concepts, Researchers
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Markon, Kristian E.; Krueger, Robert F. – Psychological Methods, 2006
Distinguishing between discrete and continuous latent variable distributions has become increasingly important in numerous domains of behavioral science. Here, the authors explore an information-theoretic approach to latent distribution modeling, in which the ability of latent distribution models to represent statistical information in observed…
Descriptors: Statistical Distributions, Modeling (Psychology), Behavioral Sciences, Information Theory
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Algina, James; Keselman, H. J.; Penfield, Randall D. – Psychological Methods, 2005
The authors argue that a robust version of Cohen's effect size constructed by replacing population means with 20% trimmed means and the population standard deviation with the square root of a 20% Winsorized variance is a better measure of population separation than is Cohen's effect size. The authors investigated coverage probability for…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Intervals, Robustness (Statistics), Probability