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The statistical recommendations of the American Psychological Association Publication Manual: Effect sizes, confidence intervals, and meta-analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:23 authored by Geoff Cumming, Fiona Fidler, Pav Kalinowski, Jerry Lai
Estimation based on effect sizes, confidence intervals, and meta-analysis usually provides a more informative analysis of empirical results than does statistical significance testing, which has long been the conventional choice in psychology. The sixth edition of the American Psychological Association Publication Manual now recommends that psychologists should, wherever possible, use estimation and base their interpretation of research results on point and interval estimates. We outline the Manual's recommendations and suggest how they can be put into practice: adopt an estimation framework, starting with the formulation of research aims as 'How much?' or 'To what extent?' questions. Calculate from your data effect size estimates and confidence intervals to answer those questions, then interpret. Wherever appropriate, use meta-analysis to integrate evidence over studies. The Manual's recommendations can assist psychologists improve they way they do their statistics and help build a more quantitative and cumulative discipline.

History

Journal

Australian Journal of Psychology

Volume

64

Issue

3

Start page

138

End page

146

Total pages

9

Publisher

Wiley

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 The Australian Psychological Society.

Former Identifier

2006056174

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-11-17

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