Abstract
Although it has long been known that analyses that treat stimuli as a xed effect do not permit generalization from the sample of stimuli to the population of stimuli, surprisingly little attention has been paid to this issue outside of the eld of psycholinguistics. The purposes of the article are (a) to present a non-technical explanation of why it is critical to provide a statistical basis for generalizing to both the population subjects and the population of stimuli and (b) to provide instructions for doing analyses that allows this generalization using four common statistical analysis programs (JMP, R, SAS, and SPSS).
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Chang, Y.-H. A., & Lane, D. M. (2016). Generalizing across stimuli as well as subjects: A non-mathematical tutorial on mixed-effects models. The Quantitative Methods for Psychology, 12(3), 201–219. https://doi.org/10.20982/tqmp.12.3.p201
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.