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9.4: How to Conduct a Power Analysis

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    50683
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    To conduct a power analysis, you first need a power analysis program. The most used freeware program is the Gpower program. The latest version of SPSS also has a power analysis. There are other online power analysis programs. I have no idea about the differences between them, and I am agnostic as to which is better.

    To conduct a power analysis, you need three things: the p value, the effect size, and the desired power. You also need to know what statistical test you want to conduct and the design considerations of the statistical test.

    The p value is the significance level, and the power analysis determines what kind of effect you want to detect at what significance level. Unless you have a conceptual reason to change the p value, the p value is set at the ubiquitous p < .05.

    The effect size is the size of the effect you want to detect. Effect sizes range from .01 to above 1. You determine the effect size based on your conceptualization of the issue and past literature reviews of effect sizes from previous studies. A default response would be .4, between a small and moderate effect size. Hopefully, your effect will be sizable enough to be detected, but not so small that it will take a larger sample size to detect.

    The desired power is the likelihood you want to see an effect. As mentioned earlier, .80 or 80% is a good default value for power.

    All those values are entered into the power analysis.


    This page titled 9.4: How to Conduct a Power Analysis is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.