What Does Effect Size Tell You? | Simply Psychology
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What is effect size?
Effect size is a quantitative measure of the magnitude of the experimental effect. The larger the effect size the stronger the relationship between two variables.
You can look at the effect size when comparing any two groups to see how substantially different they are.
Typically, research studies will comprise an experimental group and a control group. The experimental group may be an intervention or treatment which is expected to affect a specific outcome.
For example, we might want to know the effect of therapy on treating depression. The effect size value will show whether the therapy has had a small, medium, or large effect on depression.
Calculate and interpret effect sizes
Effect sizes either measure the sizes of associations between variables or the sizes of differences between group means.
Cohen’s d
Cohen’s d is an appropriate effect size for the comparison between two means. It can be used, for example, to accompany the reporting of t-test and ANOVA results. It is also widely used in meta-analysis.
To calculate the standardized mean difference between two groups, subtract the mean of one group from the other (M1 – M2) and divide the result by the standard deviation (SD) of the population from which the groups were sampled.

A d of 1 indicates the two groups differ by 1 standard deviation, a d of 2 indicates they differ by 2 standard deviations, and so on. Standard deviations are equivalent to z-scores (1 standard deviation = 1 z-score).

Cohen suggested that d = 0.2 be considered a “small” effect size, 0.5 represents a “medium” effect size and 0.8 a “large” effect size. This means that if the difference between two groups” means is less than 0.2 standard deviations, the difference is negligible, even if it is statistically significant.
Pearson r correlation
This parameter of effect size summarises the strength of the bivariate relationship. The value of the effect size of Pearson r correlation varies between -1 (a perfect negative correlation) to +1 (a perfect positive correlation).

According to Cohen (1988, 1992), the effect size is low if the value of r varies around 0.1, medium if r varies around 0.3, and large if r varies more than 0.5.

Why report effect sizes?
The p -value is not enough
A lower p -value is sometimes interpreted as meaning there is a stronger relationship between two variables. However, statistical significance means that it is unlikely that the null hypothesis is true (less than 5%).
Therefore, a significant p -value tells us that an intervention works, whereas an effect size tells us how much it works.
It can be argued that emphasizing the size of the effect promotes a more scientific approach, as unlike significance tests, the effect size is independent of sample size.
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