The assumption of sphericity in repeated-measures designs: What it means and what to do when it is violated

Violating the assumption of sphericity in repeated-measures analysis of variance leads to an inflated Type I error rate. The first portion of this article provides a thorough yet non-technical description of the sphericity assumption and explains why violations of sphericity lead to an inflated Type...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lane, David M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université d'Ottawa 2016-09-01
Series:Tutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tqmp.org/RegularArticles/vol12-2/p114/p114.pdf
Description
Summary:Violating the assumption of sphericity in repeated-measures analysis of variance leads to an inflated Type I error rate. The first portion of this article provides a thorough yet non-technical description of the sphericity assumption and explains why violations of sphericity lead to an inflated Type I error rate. The second portion describes univariate and multivariate approaches for addressing the problem of an inflated Type I error rate. The univariate approach involves estimating the parameter $\varepsilon $ that reflects the degree to which sphericity is violated and then reducimg the degrees of freedom by multiplying them by the estimate of $\varepsilon $. Two estimates of $\varepsilon $, $\mathaccentV{hat}05E\varepsilon $ and $\mathaccentV{tilde}07E\varepsilon $, have been recommended. The former has lower power than the latter whereas the latter fails to fully control the Type I error rate under some circumstances. The multivariate approach does not assume sphericity and therefore does not have an inflated Type I error rate. A decision tree for deciding among $\mathaccentV{hat}05E\varepsilon $, $\mathaccentV{tilde}07E\varepsilon $, and the multivariate approach based on a review of previously published simulations is presented along with a JavaScript program to automate the navigation of the decision tree.
ISSN:1913-4126