Marginally Significant Effects as Evidence for Hypotheses

Volume: 27, Issue: 7, Pages: 1036 - 1042
Published: May 16, 2016
Abstract
Some effects are statistically significant. Other effects do not reach the threshold of statistical significance and are sometimes described as “marginally significant” or as “approaching significance.” Although the concept of marginal significance is widely deployed in academic psychology, there has been very little systematic examination of psychologists’ attitudes toward these effects. Here, we report an observational study in which we...
Paper Details
Title
Marginally Significant Effects as Evidence for Hypotheses
Published Date
May 16, 2016
Volume
27
Issue
7
Pages
1036 - 1042
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