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Journal ArticleDOI

Research Commentary---Too Big to Fail: Large Samples and the p-Value Problem

TLDR
This research commentary recommends a series of actions the researcher can take to mitigate the p-value problem in large samples and illustrates them with an example of over 300,000 camera sales on eBay.
Abstract
The Internet has provided IS researchers with the opportunity to conduct studies with extremely large samples, frequently well over 10,000 observations. There are many advantages to large samples, but researchers using statistical inference must be aware of the p-value problem associated with them. In very large samples, p-values go quickly to zero, and solely relying on p-values can lead the researcher to claim support for results of no practical significance. In a survey of large sample IS research, we found that a significant number of papers rely on a low p-value and the sign of a regression coefficient alone to support their hypotheses. This research commentary recommends a series of actions the researcher can take to mitigate the p-value problem in large samples and illustrates them with an example of over 300,000 camera sales on eBay. We believe that addressing the p-value problem will increase the credibility of large sample IS research as well as provide more insights for readers.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The EU Child Cohort Network’s core data: establishing a set of findable, accessible, interoperable and re-usable (FAIR) variables

TL;DR: The Horizon2020 LifeCycle Project is a cross-cohort collaboration which brings together data from multiple birth cohorts from across Europe and Australia to facilitate studies on the influence of early-life exposures on later health outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linear Probability Models (LPM) and Big Data:The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

TL;DR: It is found that coefficient directions, statistical significance, and marginal effects yield results similar to logit and probit, and although LPM coefficients are biased, they are consistent for the true parameters up to a multiplicative scalar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increased pancreatic cancer survival with greater lymph node retrieval in the National Cancer Data Base.

TL;DR: Rather than demonstrating an inflection point that defines the extent of adequate lymphadenectomy, this dataset demonstrates an incremental relationship between LN retrieval and survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

Timesplitters: Playing video games before (but not after) school on weekdays is associated with poorer adolescent academic performance. A test of competing theoretical accounts

TL;DR: It is shown that, across approximately 219,000 students, the frequency of video gameplay does not appear to have a systematic relationship with academic performance, confirming the results of earlier research (Drummond & Sauer, 2014).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Things I Have Learned (So Far).

TL;DR: The application of statistics to psychology and the other sociobiomedical sciences has been studied extensively as discussed by the authors, including the principles "less is more" (fewer variables, more highly targeted issues, sharp rounding off), "simple is better" (graphic representation, unit weighting for linear composites), and "some things you learn aren't so."
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To Explain or to Predict

TL;DR: The distinction between explanatory and predictive models is discussed in this paper, and the practical implications of the distinction to each step in the model- ing process are discussed as well as a discussion of the differences that arise in the process of modeling for an explanatory ver- sus a predictive goal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining the Relationship Between Reviews and Sales: The Role of Reviewer Identity Disclosure in Electronic Markets

TL;DR: It is suggested that identity-relevant information about reviewers shapes community members' judgment of products and reviews and shows that shared geographical location increases the relationship between disclosure and product sales, thus highlighting the important role of geography in electronic commerce.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining the Relationship Between Reviews and Sales: The Role of Reviewer Identity Disclosure in Electronic Markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a unique data set based on both chronologically compiled ratings as well as reviewer characteristics for a given set of products and geographical location-based purchasing behavior from Amazon, and provided evidence that community norms are an antecedent to reviewer disclosure of identity-descriptive information.
Book

Regression Methods in Biostatistics: Linear, Logistic, Survival, and Repeated Measures Models

TL;DR: McCoch as discussed by the authors provides a unified, in-depth, readable introduction to the multipredictor regression methods most widely used in biostatistics: linear models for continuous outcomes, logistic models for binary outcomes, the Cox model for right-censored survival times, repeated-measures models for longitudinal and hierarchical outcomes, and generalized linear model for counts and other outcomes.
Trending Questions (1)
What are the positives of large samples in research?

Large samples in research provide researchers with more statistical power, increased generalizability of findings, and the ability to detect smaller effect sizes.