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Beyond Random Effects: When Small-Study Findings Are More Heterogeneous
journal contribution
posted on 2022-11-24, 03:45 authored by Tom StanleyTom Stanley, H Doucouliagos, JPA IoannidisNew meta-regression methods are introduced that identify whether the magnitude of heterogeneity across study findings is correlated with their standard errors. Evidence from dozens of meta-analyses finds robust evidence of this correlation and that small-sample studies typically have higher heterogeneity. This correlated heterogeneity violates the random-effects (RE) model of additive and independent heterogeneity. When small studies not only have inadequate statistical power but also high heterogeneity, their scientific contribution is even more dubious. When the heterogeneity variance is correlated with the sampling-error variance to the degree we find, simulations show that RE is dominated by an alternative weighted average, the unrestricted weighted least squares (UWLS). Meta-research evidence combined with simulations establish that UWLS should replace RE as the conventional meta-analysis summary of psychological research.
History
Journal
Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological ScienceVolume
5Article number
ARTN 25152459221120427Publisher DOI
ISSN
2515-2459eISSN
2515-2467Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalIssue
4Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INCUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Social SciencesPsychologyPsychology, Multidisciplinarymeta-analysisheterogeneitysmall samplesmeta-regressionrandom effectsopen dataopen materialspreregisteredMULTILAB PREREGISTERED REPLICATIONPSYCHOLOGICAL-RESEARCHEGO-DEPLETIONSTATISTICAL POWERSELF-CONTROLMETAANALYSISPERSISTENCESTRENGTHSERIESBIAS490501 Applied statistics