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      Using confidence intervals in within-subject designs

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      Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          We argue that to best comprehend many data sets, plotting judiciously selected sample statistics with associated confidence intervals can usefully supplement, or even replace, standard hypothesis-testing procedures. We note that most social science statistics textbooks limit discussion of confidence intervals to their use in between-subject designs. Our central purpose in this article is to describe how to compute an analogous confidence interval that can be used in within-subject designs. This confidence interval rests on the reasoning that because between-subject variance typically plays no role in statistical analyses of within-subject designs, it can legitimately be ignored; hence, an appropriate confidence interval can be based on the standard within-subject error term-that is, on the variability due to the subject × condition interaction. Computation of such a confidence interval is simple and is embodied in Equation 2 on p. 482 of this article. This confidence interval has two useful properties. First, it is based on the same error term as is the corresponding analysis of variance, and hence leads to comparable conclusions. Second, it is related by a known factor (√2) to a confidence interval of the difference between sample means; accordingly, it can be used to infer the faith one can put in some pattern of sample means as a reflection of the underlying pattern of population means. These two properties correspond to analogous properties of the more widely used between-subject confidence interval.

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          Most cited references13

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          An Essay towards Solving a Problem in the Doctrine of Chances. By the Late Rev. Mr. Bayes, F. R. S. Communicated by Mr. Price, in a Letter to John Canton, A. M. F. R. S.

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            The Logic of Inductive Inference

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              The test of significance in psychological research.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
                Psychon Bull Rev
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1069-9384
                1531-5320
                December 1994
                December 1994
                : 1
                : 4
                : 476-490
                Article
                10.3758/BF03210951
                24203555
                8cb640e1-efef-429e-b669-fdb77cbc1b45
                © 1994

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                History

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