ERIC Number: EJ1190116
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2016
Pages: 18
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-1364-5579
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Available Date: N/A
Secondary Observer Effects: Idiosyncratic Errors in Small-N Secondary Data Analysis
Breznau, Nate
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, v19 n3 p301-318 2016
In this paper, I extend the concept of observer effect into the realm of country-level secondary data analysis. When analyzing what appear to be the same secondary data using the same methods, macro-comparative researchers arrive at different results. I argue that this is a product of idiosyncratic variation directly or indirectly produced by the researchers. Even when this bias produces only small perturbations in results, the consequences may be very large. Using an influential study by Brooks and Manza I analyze this "secondary observer" effect (SOE). Two seemingly identical replications of their data by different researchers produced surprising variations. Reanalysis of these divergent values produces similar but not identical results. A rough calculation of the size of the SOEs suggests that they are about 0.32 standardized standard deviations across variable scores. Simulations of this size of error show that significant changes in findings occur as a result.
Descriptors: Observation, Error of Measurement, Data Analysis, Comparative Analysis, Bias, Experimenter Characteristics, Replication (Evaluation), Simulation
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Information Analyses
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
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