Experimental designs often are analyzed using a Repeated Measures ANOVA. Yet, this method does not suffice to describe all variance in a crossed effects experiment. Responses are generated from the same subjects and simultaneously those responses will be collected for the same stimuli, exposing the independence of the observations and the generalizability of the results. The current study contributes to this methodological concern by reanalyzing data from previous research with a mixedeffects model with ‘subject’ and ‘stimulus’ as random effects. That model realizes a significantly improved descriptive and predictive power, unveiling a substantial effect of stimuli on the experimental outcome.status: publishe
The question of how a certain activity (e.g., the intensity of communicationactivities during the la...
Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments a...
In crossed random effects designs, observations are nested in the combination of two random factors,...
Experimental designs often are analyzed using a Repeated Measures ANOVA. Yet, this method does not s...
Although Repeated Measures ANOVA is generally used to analyze experimental designs, this technique d...
with crossed effects in marketing-communication research: What do the experimental settings tell us
This paper provides an introduction to mixed-effects models for the analysis of repeated measurement...
Psychologists, psycholinguists, and other researchers using language stimuli have been struggling fo...
A common problem in displaying within-subject data is that of how to show confidence intervals that ...
A crossover experiment is a special form of a repeated measures experiment. An appropriate analysis ...
Psycholinguistic data are often analyzed with repeated-measures analyses of variance (ANOVA), but th...
Experiments, used in the telecommunications industry and elsewhere, are considered that involve the ...
Graefe L, Hahn S, Mayer A. On the Relationship between ANOVA Main Effects and Average Treatment Effe...
Experimental designs that sample both subjects and stimuli from a larger population need to account ...
A crossover design is an experimental design in which each experimental unit receives a series of ex...
The question of how a certain activity (e.g., the intensity of communicationactivities during the la...
Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments a...
In crossed random effects designs, observations are nested in the combination of two random factors,...
Experimental designs often are analyzed using a Repeated Measures ANOVA. Yet, this method does not s...
Although Repeated Measures ANOVA is generally used to analyze experimental designs, this technique d...
with crossed effects in marketing-communication research: What do the experimental settings tell us
This paper provides an introduction to mixed-effects models for the analysis of repeated measurement...
Psychologists, psycholinguists, and other researchers using language stimuli have been struggling fo...
A common problem in displaying within-subject data is that of how to show confidence intervals that ...
A crossover experiment is a special form of a repeated measures experiment. An appropriate analysis ...
Psycholinguistic data are often analyzed with repeated-measures analyses of variance (ANOVA), but th...
Experiments, used in the telecommunications industry and elsewhere, are considered that involve the ...
Graefe L, Hahn S, Mayer A. On the Relationship between ANOVA Main Effects and Average Treatment Effe...
Experimental designs that sample both subjects and stimuli from a larger population need to account ...
A crossover design is an experimental design in which each experimental unit receives a series of ex...
The question of how a certain activity (e.g., the intensity of communicationactivities during the la...
Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments a...
In crossed random effects designs, observations are nested in the combination of two random factors,...