Default Bayes Factors for Nonnested Hypothesis Testing

1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (446) ◽  
pp. 542-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. O. Berger ◽  
J. Mortera
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoltan Dienes

Obtaining evidence that something does not exist requires knowing how big it would be were it to exist. Testing a theory that predicts an effect thus entails specifying the range of effect sizes consistent with the theory, in order to know when the evidence counts against the theory. Indeed, a theoretically relevant effect size must be specified for power calculations, equivalence testing, and Bayes factors in order that the inferential statistics test the theory. Specifying relevant effect sizes for power, or the equivalence region for equivalence testing, or the scale factor for Bayes factors, is necessary for many journal formats, such as registered reports, and should be necessary for all articles that use hypothesis testing. Yet there is little systematic advice on how to approach this problem. This article offers some principles and practical advice for specifying theoretically relevant effect sizes for hypothesis testing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoltan Dienes

Obtaining evidence that something does not exist requires knowing how big it would be were it to exist. Testing a theory that predicts an effect thus entails specifying the range of effect sizes consistent with the theory, in order to know when the evidence counts against the theory. Indeed, a theoretically relevant effect size must be specified for power calculations, equivalence testing, and Bayes factors in order that the inferential statistics test the theory. Specifying relevant effect sizes for power, or the equivalence region for equivalence testing, or the scale factor for Bayes factors, is necessary for many journal formats, such as registered reports, and should be necessary for all articles that use hypothesis testing. Yet there is little systematic advice on how to approach this problem. This article offers some principles and practical advice for specifying theoretically relevant effect sizes for hypothesis testing.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 322-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix D. Schönbrodt ◽  
Eric-Jan Wagenmakers ◽  
Michael Zehetleitner ◽  
Marco Perugini

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robbie Cornelis Maria van Aert ◽  
Joris Mulder

Meta-analysis methods are used to synthesize results of multiple studies on the same topic. The most frequently used statistical model in meta-analysis is the random-effects model containing parameters for the average effect, between-study variance in primary study's true effect size, and random effects for the study specific effects. We propose Bayesian hypothesis testing and estimation methods using the marginalized random-effects meta-analysis (MAREMA) model where the study specific true effects are regarded as nuisance parameters which are integrated out of the model. A flat prior distribution is placed on the overall effect size in case of estimation and a proper unit information prior for the overall effect size is proposed in case of hypothesis testing. For the between-study variance in true effect size, a proper uniform prior is placed on the proportion of total variance that can be attributed to between-study variability. Bayes factors are used for hypothesis testing that allow testing point and one-sided hypotheses. The proposed methodology has several attractive properties. First, the proposed MAREMA model encompasses models with a zero, negative, and positive between-study variance, which enables testing a zero between-study variance as it is not a boundary problem. Second, the methodology is suitable for default Bayesian meta-analyses as it requires no prior information about the unknown parameters. Third, the methodology can even be used in the extreme case when only two studies are available, because Bayes factors are not based on large sample theory. We illustrate the developed methods by applying it to two meta-analyses and introduce easy-to-use software in the R package BFpack to compute the proposed Bayes factors.


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