College of Education, Temple University.
J Appl Behav Anal. 2020 Sep;53(4):2151-2171. doi: 10.1002/jaba.724. Epub 2020 May 14.
Publication bias is the disproportionate representation of studies with large effects and statistically significant findings in the published research literature. If publication bias occurs in single-case research design studies on applied behavior-analytic (ABA) interventions, it can result in inflated estimates of ABA intervention effects. We conducted an empirical evaluation of publication bias on an evidence-based ABA intervention for children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, response interruption and redirection (RIRD). We determined effect size estimates for published and unpublished studies using 3 metrics, percentage of nonoverlapping data (PND), Hedges' g, and log response ratios (LRR). Omnibus effect size estimates across all 3 metrics were positive, supporting that RIRD is an effective treatment for reducing problem behavior maintained by nonsocial consequences. We observed larger PND for published compared to unpublished studies, small and nonsignificant differences in LRR for published compared to unpublished studies, and significant differences in Hedges' g for published compared to unpublished studies, with published studies showing slightly larger effect. We found little, if any, difference in methodological quality between published and unpublished studies. While RIRD appears to be an effective intervention for challenging behavior maintained by nonsocial consequences, our results reflect some degree of publication bias present in the RIRD research literature.
发表偏倚是指在已发表的研究文献中,对具有较大效应和统计学显著发现的研究进行不成比例的代表性呈现。如果发表偏倚发生在应用行为分析(ABA)干预的单案例研究设计研究中,它可能会导致对 ABA 干预效果的高估。我们对自闭症谱系障碍儿童的一种基于证据的 ABA 干预措施——反应中断和重定向(RIRD)进行了发表偏倚的实证评估。我们使用 3 种指标(非重叠数据百分比 [PND]、Hedges'g 和对数反应比 [LRR])确定了已发表和未发表研究的效应大小估计值。所有 3 种指标的综合效应大小估计值均为阳性,支持 RIRD 是一种减少由非社交后果维持的问题行为的有效治疗方法。我们观察到,与未发表的研究相比,已发表的研究中 PND 更大,与未发表的研究相比,LRR 差异较小且不显著,与未发表的研究相比,Hedges'g 差异显著,已发表的研究显示出稍大的效果。我们发现已发表和未发表的研究之间在方法学质量上几乎没有差异。虽然 RIRD 似乎是一种有效的干预措施,可以针对非社交后果维持的挑战性行为,但我们的结果反映了 RIRD 研究文献中存在一定程度的发表偏倚。