Journal article
Same data, different analysts: variation in effect sizes due to analytical decisions in ecology and evolutionary biology
BMC biology, v 23(1), pp 35-36
06 Feb 2025
PMID: 39915771
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
Although variation in effect sizes and predicted values among studies of similar phenomena is inevitable, such variation far exceeds what might be produced by sampling error alone. One possible explanation for variation among results is differences among researchers in the decisions they make regarding statistical analyses. A growing array of studies has explored this analytical variability in different fields and has found substantial variability among results despite analysts having the same data and research question. Many of these studies have been in the social sciences, but one small "many analyst" study found similar variability in ecology. We expanded the scope of this prior work by implementing a large-scale empirical exploration of the variation in effect sizes and model predictions generated by the analytical decisions of different researchers in ecology and evolutionary biology. We used two unpublished datasets, one from evolutionary ecology (blue tit, Cyanistes caeruleus, to compare sibling number and nestling growth) and one from conservation ecology (Eucalyptus, to compare grass cover and tree seedling recruitment). The project leaders recruited 174 analyst teams, comprising 246 analysts, to investigate the answers to prespecified research questions. Analyses conducted by these teams yielded 141 usable effects (compatible with our meta-analyses and with all necessary information provided) for the blue tit dataset, and 85 usable effects for the Eucalyptus dataset. We found substantial heterogeneity among results for both datasets, although the patterns of variation differed between them. For the blue tit analyses, the average effect was convincingly negative, with less growth for nestlings living with more siblings, but there was near continuous variation in effect size from large negative effects to effects near zero, and even effects crossing the traditional threshold of statistical significance in the opposite direction. In contrast, the average relationship between grass cover and Eucalyptus seedling number was only slightly negative and not convincingly different from zero, and most effects ranged from weakly negative to weakly positive, with about a third of effects crossing the traditional threshold of significance in one direction or the other. However, there were also several striking outliers in the Eucalyptus dataset, with effects far from zero. For both datasets, we found substantial variation in the variable selection and random effects structures among analyses, as well as in the ratings of the analytical methods by peer reviewers, but we found no strong relationship between any of these and deviation from the meta-analytic mean. In other words, analyses with results that were far from the mean were no more or less likely to have dissimilar variable sets, use random effects in their models, or receive poor peer reviews than those analyses that found results that were close to the mean. The existence of substantial variability among analysis outcomes raises important questions about how ecologists and evolutionary biologists should interpret published results, and how they should conduct analyses in the future.
Metrics
Details
- Title
- Same data, different analysts: variation in effect sizes due to analytical decisions in ecology and evolutionary biology
- Creators
- Elliot Gould - The University of MelbourneHannah S Fraser - The University of MelbourneTimothy H Parker - Whitman CollegeShinichi Nakagawa - Environmental Earth SciencesSimon C Griffith - Macquarie UniversityPeter A Vesk - The University of MelbourneFiona Fidler - The University of MelbourneDaniel G Hamilton - Monash UniversityRobin N Abbey-Lee - Länsstyrelsen Östergötland, Östgötagatan 3, 58186, Linköping, SwedenJessica K Abbott - County Administrative BoardLuis A Aguirre - University of Massachusetts AmherstCarles Alcaraz - Marine and Continental Waters, IRTA, Carretera Poble Nou Km 5.5, 43540 La Ràpita, Catalonia, SpainIrith Aloni - Ben-Gurion University of the NegevDrew Altschul - University of EdinburghKunal Arekar - Indian Institute of Science BangaloreJeff W Atkins - Southern Research StationJoe Atkinson - Aarhus UniversityChristopher M Baker - The University of MelbourneMeghan Barrett - University of IndianapolisKristian Bell - Deakin UniversitySuleiman Kehinde Bello - King Abdulaziz UniversityIván Beltrán - Macquarie UniversityBernd J Berauer - University of HohenheimMichael Grant Bertram - Swedish University of Agricultural SciencesPeter D Billman - University of ConnecticutCharlie K Blake - Southern Illinois University EdwardsvilleShannon Blake - University of GuelphLouis Bliard - University of ZurichAndrea Bonisoli-Alquati - California State Polytechnic UniversityTimothée Bonnet - Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de ChizéCamille Nina Marion Bordes - Bar-Ilan UniversityAneesh P H Bose - Swedish University of Agricultural SciencesThomas Botterill-James - University of TasmaniaMelissa Anna Boyd - Mammoth HospitalSarah A Boyle - Rhodes CollegeTom Bradfer-Lawrence - Royal Society for the Protection of BirdsJennifer Bradham - Wofford CollegeJack A Brand - Swedish University of Agricultural SciencesMartin I Brengdahl - Linköping UniversityMartin Bulla - Czech University of Life Sciences PragueLuc Bussière - University of GothenburgEttore Camerlenghi - Monash UniversitySara E Campbell - University of Tennessee at KnoxvilleLeonardo L F CamposAnthony Caravaggi - University of South WalesPedro Cardoso - University of LisbonCharles J W Carroll - Colorado State UniversityTherese A Catanach - Drexel UniversityXuan Chen - Salisbury UniversityHeung Ying Janet Chik - University of GroningenEmily Sarah Choy - McMaster UniversityAlec Philip Christie - University of CambridgeAngela Chuang - University of FloridaAmanda J Chunco - Elon UniversityBethany L Clark - BirdLife internationalAndrea Contina - The University of Texas Rio Grande ValleyGarth A Covernton - University of TorontoMurray P Cox - University of AucklandKimberly A Cressman - LLC, Catbird Stats, PO Box 2018, Gautier, MS, 39553, USAMarco Crotti - University of GlasgowConnor Davidson Crouch - Northern Arizona UniversityPietro B D'Amelio - Max Planck Institute for Biological IntelligenceAlexandra Allison de Sousa - Bath Spa UniversityTimm Fabian Döbert - University of AlbertaRalph Dobler - Technische Universität DresdenAdam J Dobson - University of GlasgowTim S Doherty - The University of SydneySzymon Marian Drobniak - Jagiellonian UniversityAlexandra Grace Duffy - Brigham Young UniversityAlison B Duncan - Université de MontpellierRobert P Dunn - University of South CarolinaJamie Dunning - Imperial College LondonTrishna Dutta - European Forest InstituteLuke Eberhart-Hertel - Max Planck Institute for Biological IntelligenceJared Alan Elmore - Clemson UniversityMahmoud Medhat Elsherif - University of BirminghamHolly M English - University College DublinDavid C Ensminger - San Jose State UniversityUlrich Rainer Ernst - University of HohenheimStephen M Ferguson - St. Norbert CollegeEsteban Fernandez-Juricic - State Street (United States)Thalita Ferreira-Arruda - University of GöttingenJohn Fieberg - University of MinnesotaElizabeth A Finch - CAB InternationalEvan A Fiorenza - University of California, IrvineDavid N Fisher - University of AberdeenAmélie Fontaine - McGill UniversityWolfgang Forstmeier - Max Planck Institute for OrnithologyYoan Fourcade - Université Paris-Est CréteilGraham S Frank - Oregon State UniversityCathryn A Freund - Wake Forest UniversityEduardo Fuentes-Lillo - Institute of Ecology and BiodiversitySara L Gandy - University of GlasgowDustin G Gannon - Oregon State UniversityAna I García-Cervigón - Universidad Rey Juan CarlosAlexis C Garretson - Tufts UniversityXuezhen Ge - University of GuelphWilliam L Geary - Deakin UniversityCharly Géron - Université de RennesMarc Gilles - Bielefeld UniversitySveriges lantbruksuniversitet
- Publication Details
- BMC biology, v 23(1), pp 35-36
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Ornithology
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:001426577300001
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85218290951
- Other Identifier
- 991022048273204721
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:
InCites Highlights
Data related to this publication, from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool:
Highly Cited Paper
- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- International collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Biology