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Correction for bias in meta-analysis of little-replicated studies.
- Source :
-
Methods in ecology and evolution [Methods Ecol Evol] 2018 Mar; Vol. 9 (3), pp. 634-644. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Nov 21. - Publication Year :
- 2018
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Abstract
- Meta-analyses conventionally weight study estimates on the inverse of their error variance, in order to maximize precision. Unbiased variability in the estimates of these study-level error variances increases with the inverse of study-level replication. Here, we demonstrate how this variability accumulates asymmetrically across studies in precision-weighted meta-analysis, to cause undervaluation of the meta-level effect size or its error variance (the meta-effect and meta-variance).Small samples, typical of the ecological literature, induce big sampling errors in variance estimation, which substantially bias precision-weighted meta-analysis. Simulations revealed that biases differed little between random- and fixed-effects tests. Meta-estimation of a one-sample mean from 20 studies, with sample sizes of 3-20 observations, undervalued the meta-variance by c . 20%. Meta-analysis of two-sample designs from 20 studies, with sample sizes of 3-10 observations, undervalued the meta-variance by 15%-20% for the log response ratio (ln R ); it undervalued the meta-effect by c . 10% for the standardized mean difference (SMD).For all estimators, biases were eliminated or reduced by a simple adjustment to the weighting on study precision. The study-specific component of error variance prone to sampling error and not parametrically attributable to study-specific replication was replaced by its cross-study mean, on the assumptions of random sampling from the same population variance for all studies, and sufficient studies for averaging. Weighting each study by the inverse of this mean-adjusted error variance universally improved accuracy in estimation of both the meta-effect and its significance, regardless of number of studies. For comparison, weighting only on sample size gave the same improvement in accuracy, but could not sensibly estimate significance.For the one-sample mean and two-sample ln R , adjusted weighting also improved estimation of between-study variance by DerSimonian-Laird and REML methods. For random-effects meta-analysis of SMD from little-replicated studies, the most accurate meta-estimates obtained from adjusted weights following conventionally weighted estimation of between-study variance.We recommend adoption of weighting by inverse adjusted-variance for meta-analyses of well- and little-replicated studies, because it improves accuracy and significance of meta-estimates, and it can extend the scope of the meta-analysis to include some studies without variance estimates.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2041-210X
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Methods in ecology and evolution
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 29938012
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.12927