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Economics 105: Statistics

Economics 105: Statistics. Any questions? No GH due Monday. . Multiple-Group Threats to Internal Validity. The Central Issue. When you move from single to multiple group research the big concern is whether the groups are comparable .

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Economics 105: Statistics

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  1. Economics 105: Statistics Any questions? No GH due Monday.

  2. Multiple-Group Threats to Internal Validity

  3. The Central Issue • When you move from single to multiple group research the big concern is whether the groups are comparable. • Usually this has to do with how you assign units (e.g., persons) to the groups (or select them into groups). • We call this issue selection or selection bias.

  4. O X O O O The Multiple Group Case Alternative explanations Measure baseline Administer program Measure outcomes Do not administer program Measure baseline Measure outcomes Alternative explanations

  5. Example • Diabetes education for adolescents • Pre-post comparison group design • Measures (O) are standardized tests of diabetes knowledge

  6. O X O O O Selection-History Threat • Any other event that occurs between pretest and posttest that the groups experience differently. • For example, kids in one group pick up more diabetes concepts because they watch a special show on Oprah related to diabetes.

  7. O X O O O Selection-Maturation Threat • Differential rates of normal growth between pretest and posttest for the groups. • They are learning at different rates, even without program.

  8. O X O O O Selection-Testing Threat • Differential effect on the posttest of taking the pretest. • The test may have “primed” the kids differently in each group or they may have learned differentially from the test, not the program.

  9. O X O O O Selection-Instrumentation Threat • Any differential change in the test used for each group from pretest and posttest • For example, change due to different forms of test being given differentially to each group, not due to program

  10. O X O O O Selection-Mortality Threat • Differential nonrandom dropout between pretest and posttest. • For example, kids drop out of the study at different rates for each group. • Differential attrition

  11. O X O O O Selection-Regression Threat • Different rates of regression to the mean because groups differ in extremity. • For example, program kids are disproportionately lower scorers and consequently have greater regression to the mean.

  12. “Social Interaction” Threats to Internal Validity

  13. What Are “Social” Threats? • All are related to social pressures in the research context, which can lead to posttest differences that are not directly caused by the treatment itself. • Most of these can be minimized by isolating the two groups from each other, but this leads to other problems (for example, hard to randomly assign and then isolate, or may reduce generalizability).

  14. Diffusion or Imitation of Treatment • Controls might learn about the treatment from treated people (for example, kids in the diabetes educational group and control group share the same hospital cafeteria and talk with one another).

  15. Compensatory Equalization of Treatment • Administrators give a compensating treatment to controls. • Researchers feel badly and give control group kids a video to watch pertaining to diabetes. Contaminates the study! =

  16. Compensatory Rivalry • Controls compete to keep up with treatment group.

  17. Resentful Demoralization • Controls "give up" or get discouraged • Likely to exaggerate the posttest differences, making your program look more effective than it really is

  18. What is a Clinical Trial? • “A prospective study comparing the effect and value of intervention(s) against a control in human beings.” • Prospective means “over time”; vs. retrospective • It is attempting to change the natural course of a disease • It is NOT a study of people who are on drug X versus people who are not • http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/info/resources

  19. Model of Two-Group Randomized Clinical Trial

  20. What are the characteristics of a Clinical Trial? • Begins with a primary research question, and the trial design flows from this question (constrained by practicalities) • Everything must be exhaustively defined in advance (to prevent accusations of fishing for a positive finding) • The hypothesis (“-es”) • Population to be studied • inclusion criteria • exclusion criteria • contraindications to therapy • indications to therapy • Treatment strategy (treatment, exact dosage, dosage schedule, etc) • The outcome(s)

  21. Beta-Blocker Heart Attack Trial (BHAT) • Published in Journal of the American Medical Association • JAMA 1982; 247: 1701 - 1714 • JAMA 1983; 250: 2814 – 2819 • Up until about 25 years ago, the treatment of myocardial infarction consisted of bed rest, alleviation of symptomatic pain, possible administration of early antiarrhythmics • But a third of people who have a heart attack die from it ‘suddenly’ • In 1976, NIH sponsored a conference to discuss potential agents to be used in either a primary or secondary prevention setting to reduce sudden death, for which there was no treatment. • The conference made an official recommendation to do a clinical trial.

  22. Example: Job Corps • What is Job Corps? http://jobcorps.doleta.gov/ • January 5, 2006 Thursday Late Edition – Final SECTION: Section C; Column 1; Business/Financial Desk; ECONOMIC SCENE; Pg. 3HEADLINE: New (and Sometimes Conflicting) Data on the Value to Society of the Job CorpsBYLINE: By Alan B. Krueger. Alan B. Krueger is the Bendheim professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University. His Web site is www.krueger.princeton.edu. He delivered the 2005 Cornelson Lecture in the Department of Economics here at Davidson (that’s the big econ lecture each year).

  23. Example: Job Corps • Quotations from “New (and Sometimes Conflicting) Data on the Value to Society of the Job Corps” by Alan B. Krueger. • Since 1993, Mathematica Policy Research Inc. has evaluated the performance of the Job Corps for the Department of Labor. • Its evaluation is based on one of the most rigorous research designs ever used for a government program. From late 1994 to December 1995, some 9,409 applicants to the Job Corps were randomly selected to be admitted to the program and another 6,000 were randomly selected for a control group that was excluded from the Job Corps. • Those admitted to the program had a lower crime rate, higher literacy scores and higher earnings than the control group.

  24. RCT for Credit Card Offers Source: Agarwal, et al. (2010), Journal of Money, Credit & Banking, 42 (4)

  25. RCT for Education in India Source: Banerjee, et al. (2007), Quarterly Journal of Economics

  26. RCT for Education in India

  27. RCT for the Effect of High Rewards on Performance Source: Ariely, Gneezy, Loewenstein, and Mazar (2009), Review of Economic Studies

  28. RCT for the Effect of High Rewards on Performance

  29. Recommended Reading Amazon link Amazon link Amazon link

  30. Correlation vs. Regression • A scatter plot can be used to show the relationship between two variables • Correlation analysis is used to measure strength of the association (linear relationship) between two variables • Correlation is only concerned with strength of the relationship • No causal effect is implied with correlation

  31. Introduction to Regression Analysis • Regression analysis is used to: • Predict the value of a dependent variable based on the value of at least one independent variable • Explain the impact of changes in an independent variable on the dependent variable • Dependent variable: the variable we wish to predict or explain ... outcome variable, Y. • Independent variables: the variables used to explain variation in Y ... covariates, explanatory variables, r.h.s. vars, X-variables

  32. Simple Linear Regression Model • Only one independent variable, X • Relationship between X and Y is described by a linear function • Changes in Y are assumed to be caused by changes in X

  33. Types of Relationships Linear relationships Curvilinear relationships Y Y X X Y Y X X

  34. Types of Relationships (continued) Strong relationships Weak relationships Y Y X X Y Y X X

  35. Types of Relationships (continued) No relationship Y X Y X

  36. Theoretical Linear Models The basis of “causality” in models Time ordering Co-variation Non-spuriousness Examples Fire Deaths = f (# of fire trucks at the scene) Job Retention = f (current job satisfaction) Income = f (education)

  37. a b • Theoretical Model: • b0andb1are constant terms • b0 is the intercept • b1 is the slope • Xi is a predictor of Yi Deterministic Linear Models Yi b0 Xi

  38. Stochastic Simple Linear Population Regression Model Population Random Error term Population SlopeCoefficient Population Y intercept Explanatory Variable Outcome Variable Linear component Random Error component

  39. Stochastic Simple Linear Population Regression Model (continued) Y Observed Value of Y for Xi εi Pop Slope = β1 Pop Random Error for this Xi value Pop Intercept = β0 X Xi

  40. The Multiple Regression Model Idea: Examine the linear relationship between 1 dependent (Y) & 2 or more independent variables (Xi) Multiple Regression Model with k Independent Variables: Population slopes Random Error Y-intercept • Endogenous explanatory variables

  41. Modeling Exercise examples • What is the effect of your roommate’s SAT scores on your grades? The effect of studying? • Do police reduce crime? • Does more education increase wages? • What is the effect of school start time on academic achievement? • Does movie violence increase violent crime?

  42. Endogenous Explanatory Variable • Causes of endogenous explanatory variables include … • Wrong functional form • Omitted variable bias … occurs if both the • Omitted variable theoretically determines Y • Omitted variable is correlated with an included X • Errors-in-variables (aka, measurement error) • Sample selection bias • Simultaneity bias (Y also determines X)

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