Skip to content
Prev 2361 / 5636 Next

[R-meta] Sample size and continuity correction

Gerta, In the case of two studies there is a caveat w.r.t. to the
overlapping CI heuristic (probably also in the three study case, but I do
not know a number for that):

If, say, the assumptions of the two-sample t-test hold, then the CIs might
overlap, but the t-test might be significant. The significance of the
t-test might be seen as an indicator of heterogeneity. Goldstein and Healy
(1995) argue in favour of 83% CIs because of this suggestion (I am not sure
I buy into that) and there is also a note by Cumming and Finch (2005). Even
if the assumptions of the two-sample t-test do not hold, but appropriate
CIs are available, the "overlap but significant differences" might still
hold.

Harvey Goldstein; Michael J. R. Healy. The Graphical Presentation of a
Collection of Means, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Vol. 158,
No. 1. (1995), p. 175-177.

Cumming, Geoff; Finch, Sue. Inference by Eye: Confidence Intervals and How
to Read Pictures of Data, American Psychologist, Vol 60(2), Feb-Mar 2005,
p. 170-180.

-Philipp



On Thu, Aug 27, 2020 at 9:24 PM Gerta Ruecker <ruecker at imbi.uni-freiburg.de>
wrote: