The Bayesian Methodology of Sir Harold Jeffreys as a Practical Alternative to the P Value Hypothesis Test
Despite an ongoing stream of lamentations, many empirical disciplines still treat the p value as the sole arbiter to separate the scientific wheat from the chaff. The continued reign of the p value is arguably due in part to a perceived lack of workable alternatives. In order to be workable, any alt...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Computational brain & behavior 2020-06, Vol.3 (2), p.153-161 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite an ongoing stream of lamentations, many empirical disciplines still treat the
p
value as the sole arbiter to separate the scientific wheat from the chaff. The continued reign of the
p
value is arguably due in part to a perceived lack of workable alternatives. In order to be workable, any alternative methodology must be (1)
relevant
: it has to address the practitioners’ research question, which—for better or for worse—most often concerns the test of a hypothesis, and less often concerns the estimation of a parameter; (2)
available
: it must have a concrete implementation for practitioners’ statistical workhorses such as the
t
test, regression, and ANOVA; and (3)
easy to use
: methods that demand practitioners switch to the theoreticians’ programming tools will face an uphill struggle for adoption. The above desiderata are fulfilled by Harold Jeffreys’s Bayes factor methodology as implemented in the open-source software JASP. We explain Jeffreys’s methodology and showcase its practical relevance with two examples. |
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ISSN: | 2522-0861 2522-087X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s42113-019-00070-x |