Kelley et al. argue that group-mean-centering covariates in multilevel models is dangerous, since-they claim-it generates results that are biased and misleading. We argue instead that what is dangerous is Kelley et al.'s unjustified assault on a simple statistical procedure that is enormously helpful, if not vital, in analyses of multilevel data. Kelley et al.'s arguments appear to be based on a faulty algebraic operation, and on a simplistic argument that parameter estimates from models with mean-centered covariates must be wrong merely because they are different than those from models with uncentered covariates. They also fail to explain why researchers should dispense with mean-centering when it is central to the estimation of fixed effects models-a common alternative approach to the analysis of clustered data, albeit one increasingly incorporated within a random effects framework. Group-mean-centering is, in short, no more dangerous than any other statistical procedure, and should remain a normal part of multilevel data analyses where it can be judiciously employed to good effect.
Description
Understanding and misunderstanding group mean centering: a commentary on Kelley et al.’s dangerous practice - PMC
%0 Journal Article
%1 bell2018understanding
%A Bell, Andrew
%A Jones, Kelvyn
%A Fairbrother, Malcolm
%C Switzerland
%D 2018
%J Quality & quantity
%K centring group means methodology multilevel
%N 5
%P 2031--2036
%R 10.1007/s11135-017-0593-5
%T Understanding and misunderstanding group mean centering: a commentary on Kelley et al.'s dangerous practice
%U https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30147154
%V 52
%X Kelley et al. argue that group-mean-centering covariates in multilevel models is dangerous, since-they claim-it generates results that are biased and misleading. We argue instead that what is dangerous is Kelley et al.'s unjustified assault on a simple statistical procedure that is enormously helpful, if not vital, in analyses of multilevel data. Kelley et al.'s arguments appear to be based on a faulty algebraic operation, and on a simplistic argument that parameter estimates from models with mean-centered covariates must be wrong merely because they are different than those from models with uncentered covariates. They also fail to explain why researchers should dispense with mean-centering when it is central to the estimation of fixed effects models-a common alternative approach to the analysis of clustered data, albeit one increasingly incorporated within a random effects framework. Group-mean-centering is, in short, no more dangerous than any other statistical procedure, and should remain a normal part of multilevel data analyses where it can be judiciously employed to good effect.
@article{bell2018understanding,
abstract = {Kelley et al. argue that group-mean-centering covariates in multilevel models is dangerous, since-they claim-it generates results that are biased and misleading. We argue instead that what is dangerous is Kelley et al.'s unjustified assault on a simple statistical procedure that is enormously helpful, if not vital, in analyses of multilevel data. Kelley et al.'s arguments appear to be based on a faulty algebraic operation, and on a simplistic argument that parameter estimates from models with mean-centered covariates must be wrong merely because they are different than those from models with uncentered covariates. They also fail to explain why researchers should dispense with mean-centering when it is central to the estimation of fixed effects models-a common alternative approach to the analysis of clustered data, albeit one increasingly incorporated within a random effects framework. Group-mean-centering is, in short, no more dangerous than any other statistical procedure, and should remain a normal part of multilevel data analyses where it can be judiciously employed to good effect.},
added-at = {2024-08-09T09:22:09.000+0200},
address = {Switzerland},
author = {Bell, Andrew and Jones, Kelvyn and Fairbrother, Malcolm},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2a1d36471b2d8536cc5d3a43e84a30b06/bastionjersey},
comment = {30147154[pmid]
PMC6096905[pmcid]},
description = {Understanding and misunderstanding group mean centering: a commentary on Kelley et al.’s dangerous practice - PMC},
doi = {10.1007/s11135-017-0593-5},
interhash = {c0b182ef8fe397e226f2b0acf57cba0d},
intrahash = {a1d36471b2d8536cc5d3a43e84a30b06},
issn = {00335177},
journal = {Quality & quantity},
keywords = {centring group means methodology multilevel},
number = 5,
pages = {2031--2036},
timestamp = {2024-08-09T09:22:09.000+0200},
title = {Understanding and misunderstanding group mean centering: a commentary on Kelley et al.'s dangerous practice},
url = {https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30147154},
volume = 52,
year = 2018
}