Evaluating Effect Size in Psychological Research: Sense and Nonsense

University of California, Riverside

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Abstract

Effect sizes are underappreciated and often misinterpreted—the most common mistakes being to describe them in ways that are uninformative (e.g., using arbitrary standards) or misleading (e.g., squaring effect-size rs). We propose that effect sizes can be usefully evaluated by comparing them with well-understood benchmarks or by considering them in terms of concrete consequences. In that light, we conclude that when reliably estimated (a critical consideration), an effect-size r of .05 indicates an effect that is very small for the explanation of single events but potentially consequential in the not-very-long run, an effect-size r of .10 indicates an effect that is still small at the level of single events but…

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3,153
total citations
FWCI
266.16
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100%
References
55
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sample size determination
  • Replication (statistics)
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Psychology
  • Block size
  • Computer science
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Interpretation (philosophy)
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