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Synthesizer 1.0: a varying-coefficient meta-analytic tool

Synthesizer 1.0: a varying-coefficient meta-analytic tool

Behav Res Methods. 2010 Aug;42(3):863-70

Authors: Krizan Z

Meta-analysis has become an indispensable tool for reaching accurate and representative conclusions about phenomena of interest within a research literature. However, in order for meta-analytic computations to provide accurate estimates of population parameters (e.g., a population correlation), underlying statistical models need to be both efficient and unbiased. Current fixed-effect (i.e., constant-coefficient) models that assume a common effect for all research results perform poorly under conditions of effect size heterogeneity, whereas current random-effects (i.e., random-coefficient) models require unrealistic assumptions about random sampling of observed effect sizes from a normally distributed superpopulation. This article describes a free statistical software tool that employs a varying-coefficient model recently proposed by Bonett (2008, 2009). The software (Synthesizer 1.0) employs procedures that do not require effect homogeneity or random sampling of effect sizes from a normal distribution. It may be used to meta-analyze correlations, alpha reliabilities, and standardized mean differences.
PMID: 20805608 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

Posted in: Meta-analyses - Systematic Reviews on 12/28/2010 | Link to this post on IFP |
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