Evaluating Effect Size in Psychological Research: Sense and Nonsense
University of California, Riverside
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…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 266.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 55
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Sample size determination
- Replication (statistics)
- Context (archaeology)
- Psychology
- Block size
- Computer science
- Cognitive psychology
- Interpretation (philosophy)