articlePsychological MethodsDec 1, 2007Closed access

Toward using confidence intervals to compare correlations.

Western University

PubMed
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Abstract

Confidence intervals are widely accepted as a preferred way to present study results. They encompass significance tests and provide an estimate of the magnitude of the effect. However, comparisons of correlations still rely heavily on significance testing. The persistence of this practice is caused primarily by the lack of simple yet accurate procedures that can maintain coverage at the nominal level in a nonlopsided manner. The purpose of this article is to present a general approach to constructing approximate confidence intervals for differences between (a) 2 independent correlations, (b) 2 overlapping correlations, (c) 2 nonoverlapping correlations, and (d) 2 independent R2s. The distinctive feature of…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Confidence interval
  • Statistics
  • Robust confidence intervals
  • Mathematics
  • Sample size determination
  • Dependency (UML)
  • Correlation
  • Nominal level
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