Effect sizes are the currency of psychological research. They quantify the results of a study to answer the research question and are used to calculate statistical power. The interpretation of effect sizes—when is an effect small, medium, or large?—has been guided by the recommendations Jacob Cohen gave in his pioneering writings starting in 1962: Either compare an effect with the effects found in past research or use certain conventional benchmarks. The present analysis shows that neither of these recommendations is currently applicable. From past publications without pre-registration, 900 effects were randomly drawn and compared with 93 effects from publications with pre-registration, revealing a large difference: Effects from the former ...
Due to reliance on null-hypothesis significance testing, researchers had widely neglected effect siz...
The study aimed at identifying statistical power and effect size in number of published research in ...
Effect sizes are commonly interpreted using heuristics established by Cohen (e.g., small: r = .1, me...
Effect sizes are the currency of psychological research. They quantify the results of a study to ans...
The quality of current psychological research has been questioned because of perceived flaws in the ...
Over the years, methodologists have been recommending that researchers use magnitude of effect estim...
Effect sizes are critical to result interpretation and synthesis across studies. Although statistica...
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (American Psychological Association...
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (American Psychological Association...
The artificial environment of a psychological laboratory experiment offers an excellent method for t...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The <i>p</i> value obtained from a significance test provides no informatio...
Journals in numerous fields including psychology, education, public health, and business currently r...
Some 23 journals in educational psychology and related fields, including two organizational "fl...
Effect size information is essential for the scientific enterprise and plays an increasingly central...
Researchers in the field of psychology often face the situation that the statistical significance de...
Due to reliance on null-hypothesis significance testing, researchers had widely neglected effect siz...
The study aimed at identifying statistical power and effect size in number of published research in ...
Effect sizes are commonly interpreted using heuristics established by Cohen (e.g., small: r = .1, me...
Effect sizes are the currency of psychological research. They quantify the results of a study to ans...
The quality of current psychological research has been questioned because of perceived flaws in the ...
Over the years, methodologists have been recommending that researchers use magnitude of effect estim...
Effect sizes are critical to result interpretation and synthesis across studies. Although statistica...
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (American Psychological Association...
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (American Psychological Association...
The artificial environment of a psychological laboratory experiment offers an excellent method for t...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The <i>p</i> value obtained from a significance test provides no informatio...
Journals in numerous fields including psychology, education, public health, and business currently r...
Some 23 journals in educational psychology and related fields, including two organizational "fl...
Effect size information is essential for the scientific enterprise and plays an increasingly central...
Researchers in the field of psychology often face the situation that the statistical significance de...
Due to reliance on null-hypothesis significance testing, researchers had widely neglected effect siz...
The study aimed at identifying statistical power and effect size in number of published research in ...
Effect sizes are commonly interpreted using heuristics established by Cohen (e.g., small: r = .1, me...