| Literature DB >> 29772913 |
Peter M Steiner1, Vivian C Wong2.
Abstract
In within-study comparison (WSC) designs, treatment effects from a nonexperimental design, such as an observational study or a regression-discontinuity design, are compared to results obtained from a well-designed randomized control trial with the same target population. The goal of the WSC is to assess whether nonexperimental and experimental designs yield the same results in field settings. A common analytic challenge with WSCs, however, is the choice of appropriate criteria for determining whether nonexperimental and experimental results replicate. This article examines different distance-based correspondence measures for assessing correspondence in experimental and nonexperimental estimates. Distance-based measures investigate whether the difference in estimates is small enough to claim equivalence of methods. We use a simulation study to examine the statistical properties of common correspondence measures and recommend a new and straightforward approach that combines traditional significance testing and equivalence testing in the same framework. The article concludes with practical advice on assessing and interpreting results in WSC contexts.Keywords: correspondence measures; correspondence test; equivalence test; quasi-experiments; replication; within-study comparison
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29772913 DOI: 10.1177/0193841X18773807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eval Rev ISSN: 0193-841X