A discussion of alternatives for establishing empirical benchmarks for interpreting single-case effect sizes

Fecha de publicación

2017-09-04T13:21:06Z

2017-09-04T13:21:06Z

2016

2017-09-04T13:21:07Z

Resumen

In this paper we reflect on the numerous calls for the development of benchmarks for interpreting effect size indices, reviewing several possibilities. Such benchmarks are aimed to provide criteria so that analysts can judge whether the size of the effect observed is rather 'small', 'medium' or 'large'. The context of this discussion is single-case experimental designs, for which a great variety of procedures have been proposed, with their different nature (e.g., being based on amount of overlap vs. a standardized mean difference) posing challenges to interpretation. For each of the alternatives discussed we point at their strengths and limitations. We also comment how such empirical benchmarks can be obtained, usually b􀁜 methodologists, and illustrate how these benchmarks can be used by applied researchers willing to have more evidence on the magnitude of effect observed and not only whether an effect is present or not. One of the alternatives discussed is a proposal we make in the current paper. Although it has certain limitations, as all alternatives do, we consider that it is worth discussing it and the whole set of alternatives in order to advance in interpreting effect sizes, now that computing and reporting their numerical values is (or is expected to be) common practice.

Tipo de documento

Artículo


Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Publicado por

Universitat de València

Documentos relacionados

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://www.uv.es/psicologica/preprints/Manolov.pdf

Psicologica, 2016, vol. 27, num. 2, p. 209-234

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Derechos

(c) Manolov, Rumen et al., 2016

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