Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University
2. Department of Statistics, Harvard University
Abstract
We introduce a new, readily computed statistic, the counternull value of an obtained effect size, which is the nonnull magnitude of effect size that is supported by exactly the same amount of evidence as supports the null value of the effect size In other words, if the counternull value were taken as the null hypothesis, the resulting p value would be the same as the obtained p value for the actual null hypothesis Reporting the counternull, in addition to the p value, virtually eliminates two common errors (a) equating failure to reject the null with the estimation of the effect size as equal to zero and (b) taking the rejection of a null hypothesis on the basis of a significant p value to imply a scientifically important finding In many common situations with a one-degree-of-freedom effect size, the value of the counternull is simply twice the magnitude of the obtained effect size, but the counternull is defined in general, even with multi-degree-of-freedom effect sizes, and therefore can be applied when a confidence interval cannot be The use of the counter-null can be especially useful in meta-analyses when evaluating the scientific importance of summary effect sizes
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