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Peer reviewedHuber, George P.; And Others – Organization Science, 1990
Correlations between centralization and effectiveness were obtained from 26 independent samples in the organization science literature. Hypotheses were developed and statistically tested. The hypotheses that were supported are reflected in a final theory of the centralization-effectiveness relationship. (75 references) (MLF)
Descriptors: Centralization, Hypothesis Testing, Meta Analysis, Organizational Effectiveness
Peer reviewedHall, Gordon C. Nagayama; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1993
Performed meta-analyses on nine studies of subjects' (n=434) penile responsivity to rape stimuli. Mean effect size for raw score data suggested that most sexual aggressors against women exhibit slightly more rape arousal than control or comparison subjects, whereas mean effect size for rape index (rape arousal:consenting sexual arousal) data…
Descriptors: Aggression, Arousal Patterns, Meta Analysis, Rape
Peer reviewedViswesvaran, Chockalingam; Sanchez, Juan I. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1998
Develops the argument that estimates of the moderator effect may vary depending on the approach (regression or subgroup) taken by the meta-analyst. The difference results from ambiguity in assigning the variance shared by correlated moderators when the shared variance is also shared with the effect size. Illustrative tables are presented. (SLD)
Descriptors: Correlation, Effect Size, Estimation (Mathematics), Meta Analysis
Peer reviewedMeyer, Gregory J.; Finn, Stephen E.; Eyde, Lorraine D.; Kay, Gary G.; Moreland, Kevin L.; Dies, Robert R.; Eisman, Elena J.; Kubiszyn, Tom W.; Reed, Geoffrey M. – American Psychologist, 2001
Summarizes issues associated with psychological assessment, concluding that: psychological test validity is strong and is comparable to medical test validity; distinct assessment methods provide unique sources of information; and clinicians who rely solely on interviews are prone to incomplete understandings. Suggests that multimethod assessment…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Psychological Testing, Psychology, Research Methodology
Peer reviewedUpchurch, Sandra; Brosnan, Christine A.; Grimes, Deanna E. – Journal of Nursing Education, 2002
A process for teaching research synthesis to advanced practice nurses includes two courses: a first research applications course in which students build bibliographic databases, practice statistical analysis, and develop search skills; and a second course in which they complete literature reviews or meta analyses of research on clinical practice…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Nursing Education
Peer reviewedSchafer, William D. – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2001
Suggests the routine use of replications in field studies, pointing out that it is usually possible to synthesize replications quantitatively using meta-analysis. Makes the c ase that this is especially attractive for investigators whose research paradigm choices are limited in the field environment. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Field Studies, Meta Analysis, Research Methodology
Peer reviewedHenson, Robin K.; Kogan, Lori R.; Vacha-Haase, Tammi – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2001
Studied sources of measurement error variance in the Teacher Efficacy Scale (TES) (Gibson and Dembo, 1984). Used reliability generalization to characterize the typical score reliability for the TES and potential sources of measurement error variance across 43 studies. Also examined related instruments for measurement integrity. (SLD)
Descriptors: Error of Measurement, Generalization, Meta Analysis, Psychometrics
Rosenthal, David A.; Hoyt, William T.; Ferrin, James M.; Miller, Susan; Cohen, Nicholas D. – Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin, 2006
Over the past 25 years, meta-analysis has assumed a significant role in the synthesis of counseling and psychotherapy research through the evaluation and interpretation of the results of multiple studies. An examination of four widely recognized rehabilitation counseling journals, however, reveals that only one meta-analysis (Bolton & Akridge,…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Rehabilitation Counseling, Data Interpretation, Meta Analysis
Hargrove, Patricia; Lund, Bonnie; Griffer, Mona – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2005
This article focuses on applying systematic reviews to the Early Intervention (EI) literature. Systematic reviews are defined and differentiated from traditional, or narrative, reviews and from meta-analyses. In addition, the steps involved in critiquing systematic reviews and an illustration of a systematic review from the EI literature are…
Descriptors: Child Language, Early Intervention, Guidelines, Meta Analysis
Segerstrom, Suzanne C.; Miller, Gregory E. – Psychological Bulletin, 2004
The present report meta-analyzes more than 300 empirical articles describing a relationship between psychological stress and parameters of the immune system in human participants. Acute stressors (lasting minutes) were associated with potentially adaptive upregulation of some parameters of natural immunity and downregulation of some functions of…
Descriptors: Psychology, Stress Variables, Health, Meta Analysis
Weber, Elke U.; Shafir, Sharoni; Blais, Ann-Renee – Psychological Review, 2004
This article examines the statistical determinants of risk preference. In a meta-analysis of animal risk preference (foraging birds and insects), the coefficient of variation (CV), a measure of risk per unit of return, predicts choices far better than outcome variance, the risk measure of normative models. In a meta-analysis of human risk…
Descriptors: Probability, Risk, Animals, Predictor Variables
Havriluk, Rod – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2005
The streamline is a basic position for competitive swimming starts mid turns and has been used in many studies on resistive forces. However, there is a wide yahweh, of theoretical interpretations in these studies, leading to diverse and questionable conclusions. The purpose of this study was to determine performance level differences in the…
Descriptors: Athletics, Biomechanics, Aquatic Sports, Meta Analysis
Peer reviewedCamilli, Gregory; Vargas, Sadako; Yurecko, Michele – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2003
Examined the findings of the "Teaching Children To Read" study of the National Reading Panel and the procedures of the study. Meta-analytic techniques found that the methodology and procedures were not adequate. Findings suggest that phonics, as an aspect of the complex reading process, should not be over-emphasized. (SLD)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Meta Analysis, Phonics, Reading Instruction
Torgerson, Carole J. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2006
The term "publication bias" usually refers to the tendency for a greater proportion of statistically significant positive results of experiments to be published and, conversely, a greater proportion of statistically significant negative or null results not to be published. It is widely accepted in the fields of healthcare and psychological…
Descriptors: Bias, Research Reports, Educational Research, Literature Reviews
Vevea, Jack L.; Woods, Carol M. – Psychological Methods, 2005
Publication bias, sometimes known as the "file-drawer problem" or "funnel-plot asymmetry," is common in empirical research. The authors review the implications of publication bias for quantitative research synthesis (meta-analysis) and describe existing techniques for detecting and correcting it. A new approach is proposed that is suitable for…
Descriptors: Bias, Synthesis, Meta Analysis, Effect Size

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