Equivalence testing, an alternative to testing for statistical significance, is little used in educational research. Equivalence testing is useful in situations where the researcher wishes to show that two means are not significantly different. A simulation study assessed the relationships between effect size, sample size, statistical significance, and statistical equivalence
Scientists should be able to provide support for the absence of a meaningful effect. Currently, rese...
Equivalence tests are used when the objective is to find that two or more groups are nearly equivale...
Although dissatisfaction with the limitations associated with tests for statistical significance has...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2009. Major: Educational Psychology. Advisor: Micha...
Researchers in psychology reliably select traditional null hypothesis significance tests (e.g., Stud...
Studies designed to examine the equivalence of treatments are increasingly common in social and biom...
Tests of equivalence, which are designed to assess the similarity of group means, are becoming more ...
Tests of equivalence, which are designed to assess the similarity of group means, are becoming more ...
Equivalence tests are an alternative to traditional difference-based tests for demonstrating a lack...
In behavioral science research there is often the need to determine if an outcome variable differs, ...
Equivalence tests from the null hypothesis significance testing framework are appropriate alternative...
Researchers are often interested in testing for the equivalence of population variances. Traditiona...
Equivalence testing (ET) is a framework to determine if an effect is small enough to be considered m...
Hypothesis testing is a methodological paradigm widely popularized outside the field of pure statist...
In the learning sciences and other disciplines, researchers frequently face the challenge of decidin...
Scientists should be able to provide support for the absence of a meaningful effect. Currently, rese...
Equivalence tests are used when the objective is to find that two or more groups are nearly equivale...
Although dissatisfaction with the limitations associated with tests for statistical significance has...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2009. Major: Educational Psychology. Advisor: Micha...
Researchers in psychology reliably select traditional null hypothesis significance tests (e.g., Stud...
Studies designed to examine the equivalence of treatments are increasingly common in social and biom...
Tests of equivalence, which are designed to assess the similarity of group means, are becoming more ...
Tests of equivalence, which are designed to assess the similarity of group means, are becoming more ...
Equivalence tests are an alternative to traditional difference-based tests for demonstrating a lack...
In behavioral science research there is often the need to determine if an outcome variable differs, ...
Equivalence tests from the null hypothesis significance testing framework are appropriate alternative...
Researchers are often interested in testing for the equivalence of population variances. Traditiona...
Equivalence testing (ET) is a framework to determine if an effect is small enough to be considered m...
Hypothesis testing is a methodological paradigm widely popularized outside the field of pure statist...
In the learning sciences and other disciplines, researchers frequently face the challenge of decidin...
Scientists should be able to provide support for the absence of a meaningful effect. Currently, rese...
Equivalence tests are used when the objective is to find that two or more groups are nearly equivale...
Although dissatisfaction with the limitations associated with tests for statistical significance has...