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Hitting Is Contagious in Baseball: Evidence from Long Hitting Streaks
Author(s) -
Joel R. Bock,
Akhilesh Maewal,
David Gough
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0051367
Subject(s) - statistics , null hypothesis , statistical hypothesis testing , statistical significance , statistic , statistical inference , credence , inference , causal inference , mathematics , psychology , econometrics , computer science , artificial intelligence
Data analysis is used to test the hypothesis that “hitting is contagious”. A statistical model is described to study the effect of a hot hitter upon his teammates’ batting during a consecutive game hitting streak. Box score data for entire seasons comprisingstreaks of lengthgames, including a totalobservations were compiled. Treatment and control sample groups ( ) were constructed from core lineups of players on the streaking batter’s team. The percentile method bootstrap was used to calculateconfidence intervals for statistics representing differences in the mean distributions of two batting statistics between groups. Batters in the treatment group (hot streak active) showed statistically significant improvements in hitting performance, as compared against the control. Meanfor the treatment group was found to betopercentage points higher during hot streaks (mean difference increasedpoints), while the batting heat indexintroduced here was observed to increase bypoints. For each performance statistic, the null hypothesis was rejected at thesignificance level. We conclude that the evidence suggests the potential existence of a “statistical contagion effect”. Psychological mechanisms essential to the empirical results are suggested, as several studies from the scientific literature lend credence to contagious phenomena in sports. Causal inference from these results is difficult, but we suggest and discuss several latent variables that may contribute to the observed results, and offer possible directions for future research.

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