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Manfred te Grotenhuis

Researcher at Radboud University Nijmegen

Publications -  52
Citations -  3119

Manfred te Grotenhuis is an academic researcher from Radboud University Nijmegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Church attendance & Regression analysis. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2469 citations. Previous affiliations of Manfred te Grotenhuis include Harvard University.

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The reliability of a two-item scale: Pearson, Cronbach, or Spearman-Brown?

TL;DR: There is some disagreement, however, what the most appropriate indicator of scale reliability is when a measure is composed of two items and the most frequently reported reliability statistic for multiple-item scales is Cronbach's coefficient alpha.
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Influential Cases in Multilevel Modeling A Methodological Comment

TL;DR: This comment emphasizes the problem of influential cases and presents ways to detect and deal with them and provides recommendations and tools to detection and handle influential cases, specifically in cross-sectional multilevel analyses.
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Education, Religiosity and Moral Attitudes: Explaining Cross-National Effect Differences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the 1991 ISSP database containing relevant data of 16,604 inhabitants of 15 countries to answer three research questions on moral attitudes (i.e., attitudes concerning abortion, premarital and extramarital relations, and homosexual relations).
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Denomination, Religious Context, and Suicide: Neo-Durkheimian Multilevel Explanations Tested with Individual and Contextual Data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between religious networks and suicide risk and found that with an increase in the proportion of religious persons in a municipality, the chances of committing suicide decrease for every denomination in that municipality, as well as among non-church members.
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Welfare States And Dimensions Of Social Capital: Cross-national Comparisons Of Social Contacts In European Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe and explain differences in the amount of some dimensions of social capital within and between European societies, focusing on social contacts with family and friends, and derive hypotheses about cross-national differences in social capital from theories on the nature of welfare state regimes.