Small-sample adjustments for tests of moderators and model fit using robust variance estimation in meta-regression

Authors

Elizabeth Tipton

James E. Pustejovsky

Published

December 15, 2015

Meta-analyses often include studies that report multiple effect sizes based on a common pool of subjects or that report effect sizes from several samples that were treated with very similar research protocols. The inclusion of such studies introduces dependence among the effect size estimates. When the number of studies is large, robust variance estimation (RVE) provides a method for pooling dependent effects, even when information on the exact dependence structure is not available. When the number of studies is small or moderate, however, test statistics and confidence intervals based on RVE can have inflated Type I error. This article describes and investigates several small-sample adjustments to F-statistics based on RVE. Simulation results demonstrate that one such test, which approximates the test statistic using Hotelling’s T-squared distribution, is level-α and uniformly more powerful than the others. An empirical application demonstrates how results based on this test compare to the large-sample F-test.

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Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{tipton2015,
  author = {Tipton, Elizabeth and Pustejovsky, James E.},
  title = {Small-Sample Adjustments for Tests of Moderators and Model
    Fit Using Robust Variance Estimation in Meta-Regression},
  journal = {Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics},
  volume = {40},
  number = {6},
  pages = {604-634},
  date = {2015-12-15},
  url = {http://doi.org/10.3102/1076998615606099},
  doi = {10.1016/j.jsp.2018.02.003},
  langid = {en}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Tipton, E., & Pustejovsky, J. E. (2015). Small-sample adjustments for tests of moderators and model fit using robust variance estimation in meta-regression. Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 40(6), 604–634. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsp.2018.02.003