Effect sizes Flashcards

1
Q

effect size

A
  • express the difference as the number of standard deviations
  • = Cohen’s d
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2
Q

Cohen’s d

A

= (mean intervention - mean control) /SD

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3
Q

which standard deviation?

A
  • pooled SD from intervention and control
  • but also weigh for sample size in each group
  • use computer program to calculate
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4
Q

interpretation of cohens d, numbers

A
0 = no difference
0.2 = small
0.5 = moderate
0.8 = large 
based on rule of thumb
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5
Q

how do you interpret a Cohens d of 0?

A

there is no effect of the treatment (it is 0 SD better than the other group)

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6
Q

interpretation of Cohens d

A
  1. magnitude of effect
  2. independent of specific questionnaire
  3. you can compare effects of different RCTs using different questionnaires
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7
Q

Why does the effect size not tell us anything about the significant?

A
  • significant depends on sample size (hence power analysis)
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8
Q

what is a 95% CI?

A

you can be 95% sure that the true effect is within this interval

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9
Q

example of CI

A

e. g. Cohens d = 0.50 (95% CI 0.30 to 0.70)
- the effect in your RCT (point estimate) = 0.50
- you can be 95% sure that the real effect lies between 0.30 and 0.70)

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10
Q

what can the CI tell us about significance?

A

CI cannot include 0, then it is significant (with 95% probability you can say that your effect lies within this interval)

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11
Q

how to interpret an effect size plus CI

A
  1. the intervention group scores … SD more than the control group (point estimate)
  2. the true effect lies between … and … SD
  3. the result is (not) statistically significant (does (not) contain 0)
    - the smaller the CI, the more certain you are about the effect, you had a larger sample
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12
Q

what does a negative effect size mean?

A
  • the control group might have scored better

- or lower scores are better

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