BACKGROUND:Meta-analyses frequently include studies with small sample sizes. Researchers usually fail to account for sampling error in the reported within-study variances; they model the observed study-specific effect sizes with the within-study variances and treat these sample variances as if they were the true variances. However, this sampling error may be influential when sample sizes are small. This article illustrates that the sampling error may lead to substantial bias in meta-analysis results. METHODS:We conducted extensive simulation studies to assess the bias caused by sampling error. Meta-analyses with continuous and binary outcomes were simulated with various ranges of sample size and extents of heterogeneity. We evaluated the bi...
In this article we use Monte Carlo analysis to assess the small sample behaviour of the OLS, the wei...
Objective: To explore whether systematic reviewers selectively include trial effect estimates in met...
Background Empirical research has illustrated an association between study size and relative treatme...
BackgroundMeta-analyses frequently include studies with small sample sizes. Researchers usually fail...
1. Meta-analyses conventionally weight study estimates on the inverse of their error variance, in or...
BackgroundThere are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution fact...
Background: There are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution fa...
Contains fulltext : 153978.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Bet...
There are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution factors are as...
In this paper we use Monte Carlo simulation to investigate the impact of effect size heterogeneity o...
AbstractObjectivesBetween-study heterogeneity plays an important role in random-effects models for m...
AIMS: The study of foundational features of meta-analysis is incomplete and continues to remain impo...
The type of metric and weighting method used in meta-analysis can create bias and alter coverage of ...
BACKGROUND: Meta-analyses including a limited number of patients and events are prone to yield overe...
Publication bias is one threat to validity that researchers conducting meta-analysis studies confron...
In this article we use Monte Carlo analysis to assess the small sample behaviour of the OLS, the wei...
Objective: To explore whether systematic reviewers selectively include trial effect estimates in met...
Background Empirical research has illustrated an association between study size and relative treatme...
BackgroundMeta-analyses frequently include studies with small sample sizes. Researchers usually fail...
1. Meta-analyses conventionally weight study estimates on the inverse of their error variance, in or...
BackgroundThere are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution fact...
Background: There are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution fa...
Contains fulltext : 153978.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Bet...
There are both theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that design and execution factors are as...
In this paper we use Monte Carlo simulation to investigate the impact of effect size heterogeneity o...
AbstractObjectivesBetween-study heterogeneity plays an important role in random-effects models for m...
AIMS: The study of foundational features of meta-analysis is incomplete and continues to remain impo...
The type of metric and weighting method used in meta-analysis can create bias and alter coverage of ...
BACKGROUND: Meta-analyses including a limited number of patients and events are prone to yield overe...
Publication bias is one threat to validity that researchers conducting meta-analysis studies confron...
In this article we use Monte Carlo analysis to assess the small sample behaviour of the OLS, the wei...
Objective: To explore whether systematic reviewers selectively include trial effect estimates in met...
Background Empirical research has illustrated an association between study size and relative treatme...