The Relative Trustworthiness of Inferential Tests of the Indirect Effect in Statistical Mediation Analysis
The Ohio State University · University of Hohenheim
Abstract
A content analysis of 2 years of Psychological Science articles reveals inconsistencies in how researchers make inferences about indirect effects when conducting a statistical mediation analysis. In this study, we examined the frequency with which popularly used tests disagree, whether the method an investigator uses makes a difference in the conclusion he or she will reach, and whether there is a most trustworthy test that can be recommended to balance practical and performance considerations. We found that tests agree much more frequently than they disagree, but disagreements are more common when an indirect effect exists than when it does not. We recommend the bias-corrected bootstrap confidence interval as…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 223.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Mediation
- Trustworthiness
- Test (biology)
- Confidence interval
- Statistical hypothesis testing
- Statistics
- Statistical power