4.4 Article

A Practical Guide to Selecting and Blending Approaches for Clustered Data: Clustered Errors, Multilevel Models, and Fixed-Effect Models

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/met0000620

Keywords

hierarchical linear model; mixed effect model; linear mixed model; cluster robust errors; sandwich estimator

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This article introduces different methods for dealing with clustering issues in psychological data and emphasizes that the choice of statistical method should be guided by the research question. The article provides a user-friendly resource to help psychologists understand and apply these methods.
Psychological data are often clustered within organizational units, which violates the independence assumption in standard regression models. Clustered errors, multilevel models, and fixed-effects models all address this issue, but in different ways. Disciplinary preferences for approaching clustered data are strong, which can restrict questions researchers ask because certain approaches are better equipped to handle particular types of questions. Resources comparing approaches to facilitate broader understanding of clustered data approaches exist for economists, political scientists, and biostatisticians. These existing resources use concepts and terminology consistent with statistical training in other disciplines, so this article provides a resource using language and principles familiar to psychologists. The article starts by walking through the origin and importance of the independence assumption to motivate the problem and emergence of different solutions in different fields. Then, information on clustered errors, multilevel models, and fixed-effect models is provided, including (a) how each approach addresses independence violations, (b) research questions ideally suited for each approach, and (c) example analyses highlighting advantages and disadvantages. The article then discusses how these approaches are not mutually exclusive but instead can be blended together to create tailor-made models that flexibly accommodate idiosyncrasies in research questions and are robust to nuances of a particular data set. The broader theme is that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to clustered data. The research question-not disciplinary preferences-should inform the statistical approach. Wider appreciation of the landscape of clustered data approaches can expand the questions researchers ask and improve the theoretical foundation of statistical models.

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