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by MajimasEyepatch
741 days ago
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That’s true of most neuroimaging studies. Have you ever tried to get a bunch of people into an MRI for a study? Not easy, not cheap. Like they said, the effect size is large. With a large enough difference, you can distinguish the effect from statistical randomness, even with a small sample size. As with any study, this result must be replicated. But just waving around the sample size as if every study can be like a live caller poll with n = 2,000 is not helpful. |
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For my part, the statistician in me rather likes methodologically clean controlled experiments with small sample sizes. You've got to be careful about how you define "methodologically clean", of course. Statistical power matters. But they've probably led us down a lot fewer blind alleys (and, in the case of medical research, led to fewer unnecessary deaths) than all the slapdash cohort studies that we trusted because of their large sample sizes that were so popular in the '80s and '90s.