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Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics
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Article

Powerful and Cost-Efficient Designs for Longitudinal Intervention Studies With Two Treatment Groups

Mirjam Moerbeek*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: M.Moerbeek{at}UU.NL.


   Abstract
Three issues need to be decided in the design stage of a longitudinal intervention study: the number of persons, the number of repeated measurements per person, and the duration of the study. The degree to which polynomial effects vary across persons and the drop-out pattern also influence the statistical power to detect intervention effects. This article presents a framework that allows researchers to calculate the power of a proposed design and compare alternative designs on the basis of their costs and sample sizes. A multilevel regression model with polynomial effects varying across persons is used to relate response to time. The persons’ length of stay in the study is modeled using a survival function.

First published on September 19, 2007, doi:10.3102/1076998607302630

Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics 2008;33:41.

A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2008


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