Multilevel modeling of single-case data: A comparison of maximum likelihood and Bayesian estimation.
Author(s) -
Mariola Moeyaert,
David Rindskopf,
Patrick Onghena,
Wim Van Den Noortgate
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
psychological methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.981
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1939-1463
pISSN - 1082-989X
DOI - 10.1037/met0000136
Subject(s) - prior probability , statistics , bayesian probability , mathematics , restricted maximum likelihood , multilevel model , bayesian average , bayes estimator , variance (accounting) , context (archaeology) , random effects model , marginal likelihood , bayesian hierarchical modeling , bayesian statistics , maximum a posteriori estimation , econometrics , bayesian inference , estimation theory , maximum likelihood , medicine , paleontology , meta analysis , accounting , business , biology
The focus of this article is to describe Bayesian estimation, including construction of prior distributions, and to compare parameter recovery under the Bayesian framework (using weakly informative priors) and the maximum likelihood (ML) framework in the context of multilevel modeling of single-case experimental data. Bayesian estimation results were found similar to ML estimation results in terms of the treatment effect estimates, regardless of the functional form and degree of information included in the prior specification in the Bayesian framework. In terms of the variance component estimates, both the ML and Bayesian estimation procedures result in biased and less precise variance estimates when the number of participants is small (i.e., 3). By increasing the number of participants to 5 or 7, the relative bias is close to 5% and more precise estimates are obtained for all approaches, except for the inverse-Wishart prior using the identity matrix. When a more informative prior was added, more precise estimates for the fixed effects and random effects were obtained, even when only 3 participants were included. (PsycINFO Database Record
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