(2018-08-24, 08:04 AM)Chris Wrote: On the assumption that the result of Radin's analysis is a real effect, it's true that using this statistic would add about an extra 25% of random data. As the overall Z value he found is 10.6, I can't believe that would wipe out a genuine effect.
I was going to calculate some figures on that basis, but then I noticed something a bit strange.
The results section says that the total number of trials was nearly 101 million, and the total numbers of pairs of trials was over 96 million - a difference of about 5 million, or about 1 per session, given that the commonest number of trials per session was 20.
But the difference should be about 5 per session, as the trials from each session were divided into 5 sequences before forming the pairs. (In the illustration in figure 3, which had 3 options rather than 5, there were 14 trials and 4+5+2=11 pairs of trials - a difference of 3.)
That suggests the trials may not in fact have been divided into 5 sequences, as described in the Methods section. Or at any rate something doesn't seem consistent here.