Washington University in St. Louis
Perspect Psychol Sci. 2009 May;4(3):294-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1745-6924.2009.01127.x.
Vul, Harris, Winkielman, and Pashler (2009), (this issue) argue that correlations in many cognitive neuroscience studies are grossly inflated due to a widespread tendency to use nonindependent analyses. In this article, I argue that Vul et al.'s primary conclusion is correct, but for different reasons than they suggest. I demonstrate that the primary cause of grossly inflated correlations in whole-brain fMRI analyses is not nonindependence, but the pernicious combination of small sample sizes and stringent alpha-correction levels. Far from defusing Vul et al.'s conclusions, the simulations presented suggest that the level of inflation may be even worse than Vul et al.'s empirical analysis would suggest.
沃尔、哈里斯、温克尔曼和帕歇尔(2009)(本期特刊)认为,由于广泛存在使用非独立分析的趋势,许多认知神经科学研究中的相关性存在严重的膨胀。在本文中,我认为沃尔等人的主要结论是正确的,但原因与他们所提出的不同。我证明了全脑 fMRI 分析中严重膨胀相关性的主要原因不是非独立性,而是小样本量和严格的α校正水平的有害结合。这些模拟结果不仅没有削弱沃尔等人的结论,反而表明膨胀程度可能比沃尔等人的实证分析所表明的更为严重。