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Metaanalysis

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Title: Metaanalysis


1
Meta-analysis
  • What is it, is it useful?

2
What is meta-analysis?
  • An analysis of analyses trying to make
    generalisations from a series of experiments in
    an unbiased, quantitative way

3
Making Generalisations I
  • Traditional narrative review (X found this, on
    the other hand Y found that ..)
  • Subjective
  • Not quantitative
  • Can be overwhelmed by large number of studies
    (e.g. high CO2 research)

4
Making Generalisations II
  • Vote counting

NB Cant take mean response Conclusions biased
because significance level of a study is a
function of the sample size i.e. some studies
are better than others
5
Making Generalisations III
  • Meta analysis
  • weights each study according to sample size

General procedure - find a set of studies with
similar data - extract an effect size from each
study - calculate a weighted average effect size
across studies - construct a confidence
interval - divide data into groups (e.g.
terrestrial vs. marine) and test to see if groups
behave similarly
6
Example
  • Stomatal conductance (gs) of trees at elevated CO2

Open-top chamber, Antwerp
CO2 response of gs of Sitka spruce (Craig Barton)
7
1) Which studies?
  • Should you exclude those of dubious quality?

FACE
pots
chambers
8
Three Major Meta-analyses of gs
  • Curtis Wang 1998 all studies published to
    date (pots, chambers, branch bags etc)
  • Medlyn et al 2001 ECOCRAFT (long-term,
    field-based experiments) but
    cf. Curtis Wang showed studies gt 1 year were
    consistent
  • Ainsworth Rogers 2007 FACE studies only (but
    all growth forms)

9
Potential Biases
  • Non-significant results dont get published the
    desk-drawer problem
  • Re-publication
  • Overcoming bias
  • Know the literature!
  • Calculate how many studies would be needed to
    give a barely non-significant result
  • Funnel plots

10
Funnel Plots
no bias
Sample Size
Effect Size
bias
Hunter Schmidt 2004
data from Medlyn et al. 2001
11
2) Extracting data
  • a) Obtain from publications
  • (graphical data can be digitised e.g. DataThief)
  • b) Ask nicely
  • Whats needed?
  • Mean, standard deviation, number of replicates
    for control and experimental treatments
  • Remember to include these data in your own
    articles!

12
3) Which data points?
  • Data points are assumed to be independent.
  • Different species OK (but beware Bazzaz
    effect)
  • Different treatments OK (e.g. fertilized /
    unfertilized)
  • What about repeated measures??
  • Curtis Wang 1 data point from each
    experiment mid-growing season, final year of
    experiment
  • Ainsworth Rogers all measurements (98 data
    points from 4 experiments!)

13
Different leaves?
  • What if data are presented separately for
    different leaf categories, e.g.
  • age class
  • aspect
  • canopy height
  • Try to make comparable across studies.

e.g. Barker et al. 2005 CO2 and photoinhibition
in snow gum
14
A current problem
  • Duke FACE experiment
  • pine overstorey
  • sweetgum understorey, some emergents
  • pine gs measured on large number of trees each
    year
  • sweetgum gs measured on 2 trees/ring, once
  • BUT same number of replicates
  • How to weight?

15
4) Calculating effect size
You can use a number of different statistics to
represent effect size e.g. correlation
coefficient r (ask Chris Lusk) Hedges d
standard deviation units
What does d mean? d effect size 0 none
0.2 small 0.5 medium 0.8 large
Xis are means of experimental (E) control (C)
groups si is the pooled standard deviation of
both groups
16
Ln Response Ratio
  • A metric that many ecologists are comfortable
    with.
  • Response ratio r XiE / XiC
  • Ln response ratio L ln (r)
  • The variance of L is approximately equal to

Confidence interval is given by
Hedges et al. 1999
17
Presenting Data
Rustad et al. 2001
18
5) Combining effect sizes
  • Fixed effects model
  • Studies have a common true effect size
  • (differences just due to sampling error)
  • Mixed effects model
  • Studies have a common mean effect
  • Random variation as well as sampling error
  • (Most appropriate in ecological studies)

19
Combining effect sizes Fixed Model
  • The cumulated effect size across all expts is a
    weighted average of the effect size estimates
  • Weights wi are the reciprocals of the sampling
    variances, wi 1/vi.
  • Variance of d is
  • Can then construct a confidence interval for d

20
Combining effect sizes Mixed Model
  • We need to modify the variance
  • vi vi s2pooled
  • where s2pooled is the pooled within-class
    variance.
  • (Formula Gurevitch Hedges 1993)
  • The weights wi are the reciprocals of the
    sampling variances, wi 1/vi
  • Weights can be modified to avoid undue influence.

21
6) Division into Classes
  • Effect of high CO2 might vary among studies e.g.
    by
  • functional group
  • nutrient availability
  • exposure time
  • Can test for differences among classes
  • calculate between-class heterogeneity
  • QB Si1 to m Sj 1 to kiwij (di - d)

22
Presenting Comparisons
Effects of high CO2 on gs in FACE
Ainsworth Rogers 2007
23
Beware Confounding
Medlyn et al. 2001
Number of studies Mature Young Coniferous 6
2 Broadleaf evergreen 3 0 Broadleaf
deciduous 1 17
24
Philosophical Issues
  • What does meta-analysis really tell us?
  • Is meta-analysis a Good Thing??

Luo et al. 2006 Effects of high CO2 on carbon
accumulation in plant biomass high variability
ln
25
References
  • Gurevitch, J. and L.V. Hedges, 1993.
    Meta-analysis Combining the results of
    independent experiments. Pages 378-398 in S.M.
    Scheiner and J. Gurevitch, editors. Design and
    Analysis of Ecological Experiments. Chapman and
    Hall, New York.
  • Rosenberg, M.S., D.C. Adams, and J. Gurevitch.
    1997. MetaWin Statistical Software for
    Meta-Analysis with Resampling Tests. Version 1.0.
    Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts.
  • Hedges LV, Gurevitch JC, Curtis PS (1999) The
    meta-analysis of response ratios in experimental
    ecology. Ecology 80 1150-1156.
  • Hunter JE, Schmidt FL (2004) Methods of
    Meta-Analysis, 2nd ed. HA 29.H847
  • Cooper H, Hedges LV (1994) The Handbook of
    Research Synthesis. Q180.55.M4.H35
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