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Related Experiment Videos

On confidence intervals for within-subjects designs.

David C Blouin1, Arthur J Riopelle

  • 1Department of Experimental Statistics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA. dblouin@lsu.edu

Psychological Methods
|January 6, 2006
PubMed
Summary

This study reveals that confidence intervals (CIs) and null hypothesis significance testing (NHST) conclusions can be inconsistent in within-subjects designs due to differing statistical models. Mixed models offer a consistent approach.

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Area of Science:

  • Statistics
  • Psychological Measurement
  • Biostatistics

Background:

  • Confidence intervals (CIs) are often proposed as alternatives to null hypothesis significance testing (NHST).
  • A key debate point is whether conclusions from CIs and NHST should align.
  • Inconsistencies arise in within-subjects designs depending on the underlying statistical models used.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine classes of CIs that yield inconsistent conclusions with NHST in within-subjects designs.
  • To investigate CIs that produce consistent conclusions with NHST.
  • To propose mixed model methodology for improved consistency.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of fixed-effects models with subjects treated as fixed.
  • Comparison with mixed models where subjects are treated as random.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Exploration of generalizations to various within-subjects designs.
  • Main Results:

    • Identified specific classes of CIs leading to divergent conclusions from NHST in within-subjects designs.
    • Demonstrated that fixed-effects models (subjects fixed) contribute to this inconsistency.
    • Highlighted the consistency achieved through mixed models (subjects random).

    Conclusions:

    • The choice of statistical model (fixed vs. mixed effects) is critical for the consistency between CI and NHST conclusions.
    • Mixed model methodology provides a more coherent framework for analyzing within-subjects data.
    • Future debates on NHST should consider the implications of different modeling approaches.