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1.
Journal Article Reporting Standards (JARS) Information Recommended for Inclusion in Manuscripts That Report New Data Collections Regardless of Research Design
Journal Article Reporting Standards (JARS), Meta-Analysis Reporting Standards (MARS), and Flow of Participants Through Each Stage of an Experiment or Quasi-Experiment 245 Journal Article Reporting Standards (JARS)
Book Chapter -
2.
Reporting Standards for Research
The JARS Group anticipated that standards for reporting other research designs (e.g., observational studies, longitudinal studies) would emerge over time.
Journal Article (December 2008) -
3.
Interpreting the Magnitudes of Correlation Coefficients: Comment
Copyright 2003 by the American Psychological Association, Inc. 0003-066X/03/$12.00 Vol. 58, No. 1, 78–80 monomethod correlation coefficients, which yield results that are artificially large compared with associations found between realworld, independently measured variables.
Journal Article (January 2003) -
4.
Missing data: Our view of the state of the art
Statistical procedures for missing data have vastly improved, yet misconception and unsound practice still abound. The authors frame the missing-data problem, review methods, offer advice, and raise issues that remain unresolved.
Journal Article (January 2002) -
5.
Statistical Methods in Psychology Journals: Guidelines and Explanations
Nine individuals were subsequently invited to join and all agreed. These were Leona Aiken, Mark Appelbaum, Gwyneth Boodoo, David A. Kenny, Helena Kraemer, Donald Rubin, Bruce Thompson, Howard Wainer, and Leland Wilkinson.
Journal Article (January 1999) -
6.
The CONSORT statement: Revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports of parallel-group randomized trials
The revised Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement presented in this article incorporates new evidence and addresses some criticisms of the original statement.
Journal Article (April 2001) -
7.
What's wrong with statistical tests -- and where do we go from here [Beyond significance testing: Reforming data analysis methods in behavioral research].
This PDF is a reprint of a book chapter that considers problems with null hypothesis significance testing.
Book Chapter (January 2004) -
8.
Inference by Eye: Confidence Intervals and How to Read Pictures of Data
Wider use in psychology of confidence intervals (CIs), especially as error bars in figures, is a desirable development. However, psychologists seldom use CIs and may not understand them well.
Journal Article (January 2005) -
9.
Supplementing Your Article With Online Material
This page provides guidelines for submitting supplemental files that complement a published article.
Web Page
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