Fairchild Amanda J, McDaniel Heather L
Department of Psychology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC
Department of Psychology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2017 Jun;105(6):1259-1271. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.117.152546. Epub 2017 Apr 26.
This contribution in the "Best (but Oft-Forgotten) Practices" series considers mediation analysis. A mediator (sometimes referred to as an intermediate variable, surrogate endpoint, or intermediate endpoint) is a third variable that explains how or why ≥2 other variables relate in a putative causal pathway. The current article discusses mediation analysis with the ultimate intention of helping nutrition researchers to clarify the rationale for examining mediation, avoid common pitfalls when using the model, and conduct well-informed analyses that can contribute to improving causal inference in evaluations of underlying mechanisms of effects on nutrition-related behavioral and health outcomes. We give specific attention to underevaluated limitations inherent in common approaches to mediation. In addition, we discuss how to conduct a power analysis for mediation models and offer an applied example to demonstrate mediation analysis. Finally, we provide an example write-up of mediation analysis results as a model for applied researchers.
本“最佳(但常被遗忘)实践”系列文章探讨了中介分析。中介变量(有时也称为中间变量、替代终点或中间终点)是第三个变量,它解释了在一个假定的因果路径中其他≥2个变量如何或为何相关。本文讨论中介分析,最终目的是帮助营养研究人员阐明检验中介作用的基本原理,避免使用该模型时的常见陷阱,并进行明智的分析,从而有助于在评估营养相关行为和健康结果的潜在作用机制时改进因果推断。我们特别关注常见中介分析方法中未得到充分评估的局限性。此外,我们讨论了如何对中介模型进行功效分析,并给出一个应用示例来说明中介分析。最后,我们提供了一份中介分析结果的示例报告,作为应用研究人员的范例。