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New techniques in testing the significance of mediated effects

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Title: New techniques in testing the significance of mediated effects


1
New techniques in testing the significance of
mediated effects
  • Rob Dvorak Ryan Engdahl
  • Department of Psychology
  • The University of South Dakota

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • What is a mediator?
  • How do you test for mediation?
  • Problems with traditional tests of mediated
    effects?
  • New techniques in testing mediated effects.
  • Examples

3
Introduction
4
What is a mediator?
5
What is a mediator? The mechanism by which one
variable affects another variable
6
What is a mediator? The mechanism by which one
variable affects another variable
7
Testing Mediation
  • Baron Kenny (1986)
  • Step 1 IV DV
  • Step 2 IV Mediator
  • Step 3 Mediator DV
  • Step 4 Effect of IV on DV is significantly
    reduced by controlling for the mediator.

8
Testing Mediated Effects
  • Goodman (1960) test
  • z-value ab/SQRT(b2sa2 a2sb2 - sa2sb2)
  • Sobel (1982) test
  • z-value ab/SQRT(b2sa2 a2sb2)
  • Aroian (1944/1947) test
  • z-value ab/SQRT(b2sa2 a2sb2 sa2sb2)

9
Problems with Traditional Tests
  • The traditional tests are simply z-tests
  • ME arent normally distributed
  • /- 1.96 may, or may not, actually be significant

10
Heres Our Model
Blood Glucose
a
b
Control
Gender Video T1 Blood Glucose Trait Self-control
11
Heres Our Model
Blood Glucose
a
b
c
Control
Gender Video T1 Blood Glucose Trait Self-control
12
For our data
13
Three ways to go from here
  • You can use re-sampling techniques to bootstrap
    the standard error of your path coefficients.
  • You can refer to MacKinnons technique to correct
    for the distribution of Mediated effects
    (PRODCLIN).
  • You can utilize computationally intensive
    techniques that will boot strap the standard
    error of the Mediated effect based on your
    particular distribution.

14
Bootstrapped standard error of path Coefficients
15
Using PRODCLIN
  • Distribution of the PROduct Confidence Limits for
    INdirect effects (PRODCLIN)
  • http//www.public.asu.edu/davidpm/ripl/Prodclin/

16
PRODCLIN Results
  • OUTPUT
  • a-2.455927 sea1.168241 b12.322910 seb
    3.005995
  • ab -30.264167 sobelse 16.178686
  • rho 0.000000 Type1 error .050000
  • Normlow -61.973810 Normup 1.445475
  • Prodclin lower critical value -2.821298
  • Prodclin upper critical value 1.534485
  • Prodlow -75.909062 Produp -5.438211

17
Bootstrapping the Standard Error of Mediated
Effects
  • This is the most computationally intensive method
    for generating an accurate mediated effect.
  • Utilizes the bootstrap for the SE of the mediated
    effect.

18
Using the Bootstrap method
  • AMOS, EQS, LISREL, and Mplus are all capable of
    conducting bootstrap resampling
  • A recent program was written for STATA that can
    do it regardless of variable type for the IV MV
    or DV.

19
STATA Bootstrap ME
  • Search sgmediation

Sobel-Goodman Mediation Tests Coef
Std Err Z PgtZ Sobel
-30.264161 16.178689 -1.871
.06139792 Goodman-1 -30.264161 16.555428
-1.828 .06754195 Goodman-2 -30.264161
15.792965 -1.916 .0553261 Pecent of total
effect that is mediated 8.92 Ratio of
indirect to direct effect
0.0979 Percentile and Bias-corrected bootstrap
results for Sobel 1000 replications Observed
Bootstrap Coef. Bias
Std. Err. 95 Conf IV
-30.264161 -.3649974 16.53234
-66.39647 -2.462249 (P)
-69.26264 -3.368593
(BC) (P) percentile confidence interval (BC)
bias-corrected confidence interval
20
Conclusions
  • Mediation is becoming increasingly more important
  • There are several new ways to test for mediated
    effects that help to reduce the error associated
    with product distribution problems
  • The use of these new will likely become
    standard procedures in the near future so you
    might as well start using them now.

21
References
  • Aroian, L. A. (1944/1947). The probability
    function of the product of two normally
    distributed variables. Annals of Mathematical
    Statistics, 18, 265-271.
  • Baron, R. M., Kenny, D. A. (1986). The
    moderator-mediator variable distinction in
    social psychological research Conceptual,
    strategic, and statistical considerations.
    Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 51,
    1173-1182.
  • Goodman, L. A. (1960). On the exact variance of
    products. Journal of the American Statistical
    Association, 55, 708-713.
  • Hoyle, R. H., Kenny, D. A. (1999). Sample size,
    reliability, and tests of statistical mediation.
    In R. Hoyle (Ed.) Statistical Strategies for
    Small Sample Research. Thousand Oaks, CA Sage
    Publications.
  • MacKinnon, D. P., Fritz, M. S., Williams, J.,
    Lockwood, C. M. (2007). A comparison of methods
    to test mediation and other intervening variable
    effects. Behavior Research Methods, 39, 384-389.
  • MacKinnon, D. P., Lockwood, C. M., Hoffman, J.
    M., West, S. G., Sheets, V. (2002). A
    comparison of methods to test mediation and other
    intervening variable effects. Psychological
    Methods, 7, 83-104.
  • MacKinnon, D. P., Warsi, G., Dwyer, J. H.
    (1995). A simulation study of mediated effect
    measures. Multivariate Behavioral Research,
    30(1), 41-62.
  • Preacher, K. J., Hayes, A. F. (2004). SPSS and
    SAS procedures for estimating indirect effects
    in simple mediation models. Behavior Research
    Methods, Instruments, Computers, 36(4),
    717-731.
  • Sobel, M. E. (1982). Asymptotic intervals for
    indirect effects in structural equations models.
    In S. Leinhart (Ed.), Sociological methodology
    1982 (pp.290-312). San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
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