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9.1: Significant (P Value) Versus Meaningful (Effect Size) Results

  • Page ID
    50680
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    What do we do if we shouldn’t emphasize the p-value so much? To address that question, let us remind ourselves of the meaning behind the p value. The p value as a significance test only indicates that something happened, or put differently, the p value answers the question, “did something happen?” The p value provides an answer to that question, and that answer is a hard “yes” or “no.”

    The problem is that significant results do not mean meaningful results. Even small differences can be significant, but the differences are too small to be meaningful. The term we use for meaningful results is called the effect size.

    As of right now, you HATE the p value, and instead, you LOVE effect sizes.

    Effect sizes describe the magnitude of the difference between two groups or the strength of the relationship between two variables. Effect sizes are a way to measure the amount of change that occurs. Effect sizes address questions such as, “how much impact did the treatment have on the outcome?” or “how important is this variable in helping me predict an outcome?” Think of effect sizes as similar to “clinical significance.” While you may observe a change in your clients, is that change clinically meaningful? Some examples:

    • The client had a dramatic improvement in MMPI functioning from 75 to 35 and went from a clinical problem to normal functioning. This situation is a large effect because it is quite a transformation.
    • The client may have reduced drinking from 20 times a week to 15 times a week, but that is still a lot of drinking. This situation has a small effect because although something changed, there was not a change in the client’s drinking to a different, manageable level.
    • Adding mindfulness training increases the ability of clients to manage trauma stress from one day a week to six days a week. This situation has a large effect because it is quite a transformation.
    • Adding mindfulness training increases the ability of the client to manage abstinence from alcohol from 30 days sober to 40 days sober. This situation has a small effect because although something has changed, there was not a change in the client’s drinking to a different, manageable level.

    This page titled 9.1: Significant (P Value) Versus Meaningful (Effect Size) Results is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.