Fractional factorial designs for legal psychology |
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Authors: | Stolle Dennis P Robbennolt Jennifer K Patry Marc Penrod Steven D |
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Affiliation: | Litigation Department of Barnes & Thornburg, 11 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204, USA. dennis.stolle@btlaw.com |
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Abstract: | Researchers considering novel or exploratory psycholegal research are often able to easily generate a sizable list of independent variables (IVs) that might influence a measure of interest. Where the research question is novel and the literature is not developed, however, choosing from among a long list of potential variables those worthy of empirical investigation often presents a formidable task. Many researchers may feel compelled by legal psychology's heavy reliance on full-factorial designs to narrow the IVs under investigation to two or three in order to avoid an expensive and unwieldy design involving numerous high-order interactions. This article suggests that fractional factorial designs provide a reasonable alternative to full-factorial designs in such circumstances because they allow the psycholegal researcher to examine the main effects of a large number of factors while disregarding high-order interactions. An introduction to the logic of fractional factorial designs is provided and several examples from the social sciences are presented. |
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