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Recommendations for applying tests of equivalence

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Date

2004

Authors

Cribbie, Robert
Gruman, Jamie A.
Arpin-Cribbie, Chantal A.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

Researchers in psychology reliably select traditional null hypothesis significance tests (e.g., Student's t test), regardless of whether the research hypothesis relates to whether the group means are equivalent or whether the group means are different. Tests of equivalence, which have been popular in biopharmaceutical studies for years, have recently been introduced and recommended to researchers in psychology for demonstrating the equivalence of two group means. However, very few recommendations exist for applying tests of equivalence. A Monte Carlo study was used to compare the test of equivalence proposed by Schuirmann with the traditional Student t test for deciding if two group means are equivalent. It was found that Schuirmann's test of equivalence is more effective than Student's t test at detecting population mean equivalence with large sample sizes; however, Schuirmann's test of equivalence performs poorly relative to Student's t test with small sample sizes and/or inflated variances.

Description

Keywords

null hypothesis testing, equivalence tests, variance heterogeneity, Student’s t

Citation

Cribbie, R. A., Gruman, J. & Arpin-Cribbie, C. (2004). Recommendations for applying tests of equivalence. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 60, 1-10. doi: 10.1002/jclp.10217