CLMar 19, 2024

Assessing effect sizes, variability, and power in the on-line study of language production

arXiv:2403.15459v1
AI Analysis

This addresses the feasibility of online data collection for experimental psychologists and linguists, but it is incremental as it builds on previous studies by tempering enthusiasm with practical costs.

The study compared response time data from lab and online word production experiments to assess effect sizes, variability, and statistical power, finding that online studies are feasible but require larger sample sizes and more manual labor.

With the pandemic, many experimental psychologists and linguists have started to collect data over the internet (hereafter on-line data). The feasibility of such experiments and the sample sizes required to achieve sufficient statistical power in future experiments have to be assessed. This in turn requires information on effect sizes and variability. In a series of analyses, we compare response time data obtained in the same word production experiment conducted in the lab and on-line. These analyses allow us to determine whether the two settings differ in effect sizes, in the consistency of responses over the course of the experiment, in the variability of average response times across participants, in the magnitude of effect sizes across participants, or in the amount of unexplained variability. We assess the impact of these differences on the power of the design in a series of simulations. Our findings temper the enthusiasm raised by previous studies and suggest that on-line production studies might be feasible but at a non-negligible cost. The sample sizes required to achieve sufficient power in on-line language production studies come with a non-negligible increase in the amount of manual labour.

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