| Literature DB >> 23888147 |
Craig P Speelman1, Marek McGann.
Abstract
In this paper we voice concerns about the uncritical manner in which the mean is often used as a summary statistic in psychological research. We identify a number of implicit assumptions underlying the use of the mean and argue that the fragility of these assumptions should be more carefully considered. We examine some of the ways in which the potential violation of these assumptions can lead us into significant theoretical and methodological error. Illustrations of alternative models of research already extant within Psychology are used to explore methods of research less mean-dependent and suggest that a critical assessment of the assumptions underlying its use in research play a more explicit role in the process of study design and review.Entities:
Keywords: average; cognition; distributional analyses; mean; noise; variability
Year: 2013 PMID: 23888147 PMCID: PMC3719041 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Assumptions underlying the use of the mean in psychology research.
| 1.There is a true value thatwe are trying to approximate whenwe measure humans on some dimension. |
| 2. Averaging helps us to eliminate the noise in our measures to see the true value. |
| 3. Any inability to use the mean as a reliable measure of a stable characteristic is a product of weaknesses in methodology or calculation (i.e., it does not represent a failure in the initial assumption that a true value exists). |
| 4. The noise in our measurements represents the effects of variables unrelated to the one being measured. |
Number (%) of empirical articles in Memory & Cognition (2012) and Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory,and Cognition (2012) classified according to main analysis type.
| Journal | Ind. Diffs | Other | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M&C | 88 (82.2%) | 17 (15.9%) | 2 (1.9%) | 107 |
| JEP: LMC | 79 (81.44%) | 6 (6.19%) | 12 (12.37%) | 97 |