| Literature DB >> 34608639 |
Courtland S Hyatt1, Michael L Crowe2, Samuel J West3, Colin E Vize4, Nathan T Carter1, David S Chester3, Joshua D Miller1.
Abstract
Recent reviews suggest that, like much of the psychological literature, research studies using laboratory aggression paradigms tend to be underpowered to reliably locate commonly observed effect sizes (e.g., r = ~.10-.20, Cohen's d = ~0.20-0.40). In an effort to counter this trend, we provide a "power primer" that laboratory aggression researchers can use as a resource when planning studies using this methodology. Using simulation-based power analyses and effect size estimates derived from recent literature reviews, we provide sample size recommendations based on type of research question (e.g., main effect vs. two-way vs. three-way interactions) and correlations among predictors. Results highlight the large number of participants that must be recruited to reach acceptable (~80%) power, especially for tests of interactions where the recommended sample sizes far exceed those typically employed in this literature. These discrepancies are so substantial that we urge laboratory aggression researchers to consider a moratorium on tests of three-way interactions. Although our results use estimates from the laboratory aggression literature, we believe they are generalizable to other lines of research using behavioral tasks, as well as psychological science more broadly. We close by offering a series of best practice recommendations and reiterating long-standing calls for attention to statistical power as a basic element of study planning.Entities:
Keywords: aggression; power; research methodology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34608639 PMCID: PMC8980114 DOI: 10.1002/ab.21996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aggress Behav ISSN: 0096-140X Impact factor: 3.047